Every 200 million years
The Sun - and the Solar System - are about 26,000 light-years from the Milky Way's center. It takes an estimated 225 million years to go once around the galaxy.
In our solar system, planets travel faster because their mass is much smaller than the Sun, so they orbit the Sun while the latter remains relatively in the same place. It is more accurate to say both the planets and the Sun orbit a common center of gravity - but in this context, the Sun moves less. It is of note that the solar system itself is also in a long slow orbit around the galactic center - so in a real sense, the entire solar system is moving; the Milky Way galaxy also shares an orbit around a galactic cluster, and on a larger scale, also within a supercluster, all of which have their own motion.
Saturn orbits the Sun like the other planets, it does not orbit anything else. One orbit for Saturn takes 29.4571 Earth years.
neptunes orbit time of the sun is 164.79 years to orbit the sun neptunes orbit time of the sun is 164.79 years to orbit the sun
About another 4 billion years. Then the sun will explode and destroy the solar system, including mars. Until then it will have to orbit the sun. If you mean, "How long does it take for Mars to make a full orbit around the sun" (or something similar to that) , its 687 days
It takes approximately 230 million years for the solar system to orbit our galaxy at a speed of about 828,000kph (515,000 mph)
Current best estimates are about 225 million years.
About 230 million years
Current best estimates are about 225 million years.
200,000 years according to my Cosmology teacher.
250 million years is right for the miky way :) :) :)
About 200-250 million earth years. This is known as a Cosmic Year or a Galactic Year,
Gravity. The Sun and our solar system are one tiny part of the Milky Way, and about as significant as a single grain of sand on a very long beach.
NO, it is the solar system whichis part of the Milky Way Galaxy. There's also the faint band of many stars that's called the Milky Way. That's a long way from the solar system, but within the Milky Way Galaxy.
30 days
All the planets in the solar system are approximately the same age. Extrasolar planets are all approximately the same age as the star they orbit. Population II (low metallicity) stars are the oldest stars, but they're unlikely to have planets.
The actual term is "revolution" and the Sun takes about 200 to 225 million years to make one complete orbit of the galactic center of the Milky Way.