Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and maybe Uranus. But if you live long enough Neptune too.
Mercury: 88 days to orbit the sun.
Venus: 225 days to orbit the sun.
Earth: 1 year to orbit the sun.
Mars: Almost 2 years to orbit the sun.
Jupiter: 12 years to orbit the sun.
Saturn: 30 years to orbit the sun.
Uranus: 84 years to orbit the sun.
Neptune: 165 years to orbit the sun.
It is dependant on the distance from the sun
This question was posted in the category of "Astronomy, Dwarf Planet Pluto." The orbit section in the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pluto page describes how the elliptical orbit of Pluto crosses the orbit of Neptune. The orbit of Pluto crossed that of Neptune April 30, 1483, July 11, 1735, and finally in February 7, 1979. 235 years and 244 years respectively.
Once for every day you have been alive, since the Earth rotates once a day.
Because the Earth spins about once every 23 hours and 56 minutes, you will
actually rotate 366.25 times a year, rather than the 365.25 solar days (as
measured by sunrises at any given location).
*People who live closer to the equator actually travel a greater distance every day
than those in higher latitudes, because the Earth is moving more (and faster) there.
The surface of the Earth at the equator is moving at about 1040 miles per hour
(465.1 m/sec).
So your total is once for every day you've been alive, and then either plus one
or minus one for every time you've traveled all the way around the world in the
same direction, (depending on which way you traveled).
If you believe scientific estimates confirmed by use of radioactive isotopes, the Earth is approximately 4.6 billion years old and considering that a year is an indication of a revolution around the sun, there would be approximately 4.6 billion such revolutions.
If you believe religious estimates confirmed by The Bible and Church historians, the Earth has been in existence for around 6000 years. Therefore, there would be about 6000 such revolutions.
In the billions of years since Venus formed, it has orbited the sun around 7 or 8 billion times.
The planet Earth orbits the sun once each year, so how ever many years old you are, that's how many times you have orbited the sun.
Approximately 20 times.
See related question.
The Earth has revolved around the Sun about 4,600,000,000 times
No more than 20. It takes the sun 240 million years to go around once.
Basically, that is the same thing.
13 times. You go around the Sun once every year.
The Ptolemaic system belived that the earth was the center of everything and all the planet and sun traveled around it and the copernican system belived that the sun was the center of everything and the planets and traveled around the sun.
1
It take one yaer for the earth to revole around the sun .
it doesn't - the earth and other planets go round the sun
When the Earth revolves around the sun it take a route that it has traveled many times before. in a year the Earth travels 360 degrees, less than a degree a day.
that the earth traveled around the sun
Yes.
revolution
13 times. You go around the Sun once every year.
The Ptolemaic system belived that the earth was the center of everything and all the planet and sun traveled around it and the copernican system belived that the sun was the center of everything and the planets and traveled around the sun.
Mars will revole around the sun forever until it blows up or the sun has a supernova
Mercury rotates on its axis three times for every two revolutions it makes around the Sun. So if Mercury rotates 9 times, it will make 6 revolutions around the Sun.
1
1
One.
It takes 4000 times