One full rotation of any planet on its axis is the length of that planets day, Earth included.
59 earth days
No, not all planets in our solar system have days that are 24 hours long. For example, Venus has a rotation period longer than its orbital period, resulting in a day that is longer than 24 Earth hours. In contrast, Jupiter has a fast rotation speed, leading to a day that is about 10 hours long.
A Jupiter day is 10 Earth hours, and a year is 12 Earth years, or about 4383 Earth days.
The length of each planet's days are different because they rotate at different speeds. A day on Mercury is equal to 58.5 days on Earth. A day on Mars takes 24 hours and 39 minutes on Earth. A day on Venus is 243 Earth days and a day on Jupiter is equal to 9.9 Earth hours.
The outer planets have longer rotation periods than the inner planets. For example, a day on Jupiter, an outer planet, is about 10 hours long, while a day on Earth, an inner planet, is about 24 hours long.
6 Earth Days
venus completes an orbit every 224.65 days.
Just Mars.
Rotation Period about Axis: (length of Pluto's day) 6.387 days (retrograde). A year on Pluto is 248 Earth years.
The rotation period of Venus is equal to about 243.02 Earth days.
Mercury is 58.646 earth days.