No two planets in our solar system have the same length of day
or length of year.
Compared with Earth, these planets have longer years:
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
These have much longer days than Earth: Mercury and Venus.
Mars has a day that's slightly longer than Earth's day.
Depending on the particular definition of "day" that is used, two planets have
a day that's longer than than that planet's year.
They are Mercury (solar day) and Venus (sidereal day).
Gerald Ford. He lived to 93 years and 165 days. Ronald Reagan comes in a close second, living to 93 years and 120 days.
Any planet with people who use calendars would need to invent leap years.
the sun is bigger than any other planets because millions of years ago meteorites smashed together to make the sun and to any other planets that did not happen
Mercury has the shortest year of any of the planets. It is only 88 days. Mercury's day takes 58.646 Earth days.
All planet's years are longer than their days except for Venus.You probably meant to ask which planet's day is longer than its year, and the answer is Venus.
Planets move trough the constellations (relatively) rapidly so any map would be inaccurate in just a few days weeks or months. The outer planets Neptune and Uranus move very slowly so their position among the constellations remains the same for months or even years.
Mercury: 87.96 Earth days Venus: 224.68 Earth Days Earth: 365.26 days Mars: 686.98 Earth Days Jupiter: 11.862 Earth Years Saturn: 29.456 Earth Years Uranus: 84.07 Earth Years Neptune: 164.81 Earth Years there is no Pluto
There's has never been a United States President whose presidency lasted for twelve years longer than any other US President. Franklin Roosevelt's presidency lasted for 12 years, but that was, at most, only 4 years longer than any other President's.
The first plant was found in 1678 by Roberta hooke
No, usually the planets are in different directions. Every few years two or three of them line up.
On all but two planets, the years are longer than the days. (This is a transposition of the related question below.)On Mercury, the (rotational) day is 59 Earth days long, but its short year of 88 Earth days produces "solar days" that are 176 Earth days, or twice as long as the year.On Venus, a (rotational) day is 243 Earth days, but its year is only about 225 Earth days long. However, Venus spins on its axis in the opposite direction that the other planets do. The combination of slow clockwise spin and shorter year gives Venus an apparent "solar day" of about 117 Earth days. (While there is light at the surface, the Sun is never actually visible on Venus.)
At over 772 light years away, it is difficult to say if this Star has any planets, yet alone if there are any moons of those planets. Theres a chance, but we may never know the answer.