A year on Venus is 224 Earth days and a day is 243 Earth days.
This answer isn't bad, but remember the Solar day is "only" about 117
Earth days on Venus. I like the Solar day.
It takes Venus about 243 Earth days to rotate once and that's what is
called a Sidereal day.
224.7 earth days, or about 0.62 Earth years because venus is closer to the sun and that means it takes less time to go around it.
Venus takes 224.7 Earth days to orbit the sun. A year on Venus is 0.62 as long as a year on Earth. However, a day on Venus is actually a little longer than a year on Venus..
Venus's "year" (period of revolution around the Sun) in Earth years is 0.615195.
So, the answer is: about 1.6255 Venus years equal one Earth year.
Venus orbits the Sun (a Venus year) in about 224.7 Earth days.
The Earth orbits in about 365.25 days.
One Venus year is equivalent to 255 Earth days, or about 0.7 Earth years.
Venus takes less time to orbit the sun than Earth does. One year on Venus is about 0.6 years on earth, or a little more than 7 months.
One Venus day equals 243 Earth days. Seven Venus days equals 1701 Earth days, or 4.66 Earth years. 243 days is the Sidereal day length,but remember Venus has a Solar day of only 117 Earth days.
There are 243 Earth days for a Venus day - but a Venus year is just under 225 Earth days. Therefore - a day on Venus is longer than a year !
A day on Venus is equal to 243 Earth Days. So a week on Venus would be 1,701 Earth days or 4.65 Earth years. However, a Venus year is only 224 Earth Days!!! so a week could be 4.3 Earth days
Venus takes 225 days to orbit once around the Sun. This makes one year on Venus less than one year on Earth.
Both Mercury and Venus have shorter years.
a little less htan 1
Venus rotates VERY slowly. Each day on Venus takes 243 Earth days. A year on Venus takes 224.7 Earth days. It takes 224.7 Earth days for Venus to orbit the sun once. The same side of Venus always faces Earth when the Earth and Venus are closest together.
One Venus day equals 243 Earth days. Seven Venus days equals 1701 Earth days, or 4.66 Earth years. 243 days is the Sidereal day length,but remember Venus has a Solar day of only 117 Earth days.
There are 243 Earth days for a Venus day - but a Venus year is just under 225 Earth days. Therefore - a day on Venus is longer than a year !
A day on Venus is equal to 243 Earth Days. So a week on Venus would be 1,701 Earth days or 4.65 Earth years. However, a Venus year is only 224 Earth Days!!! so a week could be 4.3 Earth days
Your age would remain the same wherever you are. The convention of counting your age in Earth years is purely a local custom. The fact that other planets orbit the sun at different rates would not alter your physical or biological age. Though you could use the local year of that planet to count years. They would, of course, be of a different length to an earth year. As Venus orbits the sun in a shorter time period than the earth the year on Venus is shorter that the year on earth. Therefore if you counted your age in Venus years you would be 'older'. --- If you measured your age in Venus years, by each orbit of the planet around the Sun (rather than the Earth calendar) you would be older. A year on Venus is only about 225 Earth days long, so an Earth year of age is equal to about 1.6 Venus years.
Venus' year is 224.7 (Earth) days, while Earth's year is 365.26 days. In terms of Venus, if you were ten, you would be 2247 Earth days old. Divide that by 365.26 and you get 6.15 Earth years. So you would be a little bit more than 6 Earth years old if you were 10 Venusian years old.
Venus takes 225 days to orbit once around the Sun. This makes one year on Venus less than one year on Earth.
Solar day (24 hours for the Earth): about 116.75 Earth days. Sidereal day (rotation period, about 23 hours and 56 minutes for the Earth): about 243 Earth days. Year: about 224.7 Earth days.
Venus. It has a year of about 225 of our days. Mars is about 687 days and Jupiter is 11.86 of our years.
Both Mercury and Venus have shorter years.
A Venus day (spin) is 1.08 times as long as a Venus year.The very slow rotational day of Venus is 243 Earth days long, while its year (one orbit of the Sun) is only about 225 Earth days. Combined with the retrograde direction of its spin, this produces a "solar day" (sunrise to sunrise) of about 116.75 Earth days.So in terms of rotation, there is only 0.925 days in a Venus year. In terms of daylight experienced on the surface, there are 1.92 Venus days per Venus year.