The sidereal rotation period of Venus is a very long 243.0185 Earth days. That means it takes a bit over 243 Earth days to rotate once on its axis (a Venus sidereal "day"). It gives new meaning to the expression, "It's been a long day."
The rotational velocity at the equator is a blazing 6.52 kilometers per hour (a bit over 4 miles per hour). You can walk that fast if you step out and don't drag your feet. A link can be found below.
firstly, to find a the distance (s) the time (t) and the circumference (c)
then, the average speed (Vav) = (distance times circumference) divided by the time and is expressed in kmhr to the power of negative one
If we look at the solar system from an arbitrary position "above" the ecliptic plane, we can say that Venus orbits in a counterclockwise direction, but that it rotates in a clockwise direction, the only planet to do so. At some point an event such as an impact caused it to lose its original counter-clockwise spin.
Venus now turns very slowly, taking longer to complete one spin (243 Earth days) than it does to orbit the Sun (about 225 days). These movements combine to make a "solar day" (sunrise to sunrise, if you could see it) of about 117 Earth days.
Just 6.5 km/h at the equator, vey slow compared to Earth's 1,670 km/h.
Venus rotates so slowly that it's days are longer than it's years.
Venus orbits the Sun at about 126,072 kph (78,337 mph).
Venus rotates once in about 243 Earth days.
The speed of rotation (at the equator) of Venus is about 6.5 kilometers
per hour.
About 30 miles per second ( yea rite nah ah my teacher said it doesn't )
It's orbital velocity is 35.03 kilometres per second and it takes about 224 days to orbit the sun.
Venus makes a complete orbit of the Sun every 224.7 earth days. This means that a Venusian year is equivalent to 8 months on Earth.
1600 km/h
Orbital velocity refers to the speed at which a planet travels in its orbit.
average orbital speed of 9.69km/s
According to http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/, Venus has an orbital velocity of 78,341 mph, and Neptune's is 12,253 mph...
The average orbital speed of a planet or other object in orbit round the Sun is propotional to the reciprocal of the square root of the average distance from the Sun. V is proportional to 1/ sqrt (D) This can be derived from Kepler's laws of planetary motion, published in 1609 and still in use.
Being 2nd closest to the Sun, Venus is a speedy planet. It orbits the Sun at an average speed of 78,335 miles per hour (21.76 miles/second - 35.02 km/s).
It is the orbital velocity (speed and direction) or orbital speed (rate of motion). It is usually stated as "average orbital speed" but is actually "mean orbital speed."
5.43 km per second.
putangina
Orbital velocity refers to the speed at which a planet travels in its orbit.
A year is shorter on Venus than on Earth. A year is the time taken for a planet to orbit the Sun. Venus has a smaller orbit and a higher orbital speed.
A year is shorter on Venus than on Earth. A year is the time taken for a planet to orbit the Sun. Venus has a smaller orbit and a higher orbital speed.
The orbital speed of a planet is a direct result of the gravitational force between that planet and the Sun. The greater the force, the faster the speed.
The orbital speed of a planet is the time it takes to cycle around the sun. The spinning speed of a planet is the time it takes for the planet to rotate on it's axis.
average orbital speed of 9.69km/s
According to http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/, Venus has an orbital velocity of 78,341 mph, and Neptune's is 12,253 mph...
earth orbital speed is 30 kilometers per second!!
Venus is the slowest planet with a rotational speed of 243 Earth days equaling one Venusian day.