No. The Earth orbits the Sun once in 365.24 days
No. Earth orbits the Sun once every 365.256363004 days.
yes
True
no
It orbits the star 581 once every 13 days. Earth orbits its star, the sun, every 365 days. Which means that Gliese orbits faster than Earth.
Well, if you mean the object that orbits the earth, it's the moon,
Mercury rotates once every 58.6 Earth days, and orbits the Sun in about 88 Earth days.The result is that Mercury's "solar day" is about 176 Earth days, twice as long as its year.
27.32 days. During that time, the Earth moves about 1/13th of the way around its orbit, and it takes the Moon another 2+ days to "catch up" to be in the same relative alignment of Earth-Moon-Sun. So the Moon orbits the Earth in 27.32 days, but the time between full moons is 29.5 days.
The moon orbits the earth once every 28 days and therefore does just over 13 revolutions each year
it orbits the sun once every 365 days(a year) the moon orbits the earth every month(28-31days)
The Moon orbits the earth nearly once a month. It orbits every 28 days. In a year, the Moon can orbit the earth 13 times.
It orbits the star 581 once every 13 days. Earth orbits its star, the sun, every 365 days. Which means that Gliese orbits faster than Earth.
27.32 days
Horse Isle Answer - 27.3
No, it orbits the earth once every 27.5 days or so.
Well, if you mean the object that orbits the earth, it's the moon,
Venus orbits the Sun once every 224.7 Earth days.
Mercury orbits the sun once every 88 days, making the "year" on Mercury 88 days long.
Venus orbits once in 224.7 days, so multiply that by 24 hours in a day.
Saturn revolves or orbits around the sun once every 29.4 Earth years, or once every 10,755.7 Earth days.
The Earth orbits the Sun once every 365.25 days. The Earth spins on its axis once in 24 hours.