Kilometers to Jupiter Radii
1 Kilometer equals 0.000014 Jupiter Radii using fixed astronomy size constants anchored to meters.
Direct Answer
1 Kilometer equals 0.000014 Jupiter Radii
This conversion uses fixed astronomy size constants anchored to meters.
For 2 Kilometers, the result equals 0.000029 Jupiter Radii.
Converter Calculator
0.000014 Jupiter Radii (R_jup)
SwitchExplanation
This page converts Kilometers into Jupiter Radii using fixed astronomy size constants anchored to meters. The direct answer, calculator, and common values table all follow the same factor.
Formula: Jupiter Radii = Kilometers × 0.000014. Why: standard metric units are used as the common size basis, then planetary or stellar reference constants are applied to reach the target scale.
Kilometers (km): a practical metric unit for planetary and orbital size scales.
Jupiter Radii (R_jup): a planetary reference unit commonly used to describe large planets and exoplanet sizes.
This route is useful when expressing planetary or stellar size references in metric units, or restating metric sizes in familiar astronomy reference scales.
Because the route stays inside one meter-based reference model, the mirror page reverses the same constants without changing the underlying assumptions.
Common Conversion Values
| Kilometers (km) | Jupiter Radii (R_jup) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.000014 |
| 2 | 0.000029 |
| 5 | 0.000072 |
| 10 | 0.000143 |
| 100 | 0.00143 |
| 1,000 | 0.014304 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is 1 kilometer in jupiter radii?
1 Kilometer equals 0.000014 Jupiter Radii on this page.
Does this Kilometers to Jupiter Radii page convert through meters first?
Yes. Standard metric units act as the shared size basis, and the astronomy reference unit is then applied through its fixed meter constant.
When would I convert kilometers to jupiter radii?
This route is useful when expressing planetary or stellar size references in metric units, or restating metric sizes in familiar astronomy reference scales.
How do I reverse Kilometers to Jupiter Radii?
Use the mirror Jupiter Radii to Kilometers route; it reverses the same astronomy size constants without changing the underlying assumptions.