The rotational period of Uranus is a little over 17 hours, so the answer to your question is "about three-quarters of one".
84 days and 17hrs and 14 min you peoples
It takes Uranus 17 hours and 14 minutes to rotate on its axis. However it take Uranus 30,685 Earth Days to revolve or move around the sun. Our earth takes 365 days.
It takes about 58.6 Earth days to rotate:)
A year on Uranus is equivalent to 84 earth years.84 Earth years or 30,240 earth days
Earth's moon does rotate on it's axis but it does it once each orbit of the Earth: every 27.3 days .
An orbit by Uranus takes 30,800 Earth days (84.3 Earth years, each having 365.25 Earth days).However, a "day" on Uranus is only 17.24 hours long, so a Uranus year consists of 42,877 "Uranian days".*Conflicting figures will result from application of non-Julian years for Earth, or the synodic period of Uranus's orbit, which is 369.66 Earth days.
Mercury: 58.64 days Venus: -243.02 days Earth: 1 day Mars: 1.03 days Jupiter: 0.41 days Saturn: 0.43 days Uranus: -0.72 days Neptune: 0.67 days Negative means the planet spins in the direction opposite of Earth Earth has a rotational period of one day by definition Note that because the gas giants have no surface, different parts rotate and different speeds. The listed speed is the average.
It takes Uranus 17 hours, 14 minutes and 24 seconds to rotate around it's own axix. In other words, a day on Uranus is shorter than a day on Earth.
27.3 Days
687 earth days
40 days
Uranusus orbital period is 32.234 Earth days