Venus rotates once every 243 Earth days but from one sunrise to the next would be only 116.75 Earth days
five million trillion
It's about 243 Earth days.
Venus' length of rotation in days is 116 days and 18 hours (about 117 days).
venus completes an orbit every 224.65 days.
1 day on Venus is as long as one year on Earth. No seriously, that is true, it takes about one year for venus to make a complete rotation (i dont mean revolution, but rotation like spinning a basket ball.) Actually Venus rotates in about 243 Earth days and that's only about 8 months, not a year. One day on Venus is about 243 Earth days long. There are 24 hours in a day on Earth, 243 x 24=5832 hours. That's the rotation period, known as the "sidereal day". But it's more complicated than that because you're ignoring the "solar day". The solar day depends on a planet's motion round the Sun as well as its spin. For Venus the solar day is about 116.75 Earth days. That's about 116.75 x 24 = 2802 hours.
Venus takes 243.0185 Earth days (5832.444 hours) to rotate once.
On the planet Venus, it takes 5,832 hours to complete a full rotation on the axis
The length of one Venusian day is 1,407.5 Earth hours. That is the time it takes to make one full rotation on its axis.
Rotation (Retrograde) 243 Days, 0.5 Hours
venus completes an orbit every 224.65 days.
The rotation period of Venus is equal to about 243.02 Earth days.
The period of rotation for Venus is 243 days.
232 days
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.
1 day on Venus is as long as one year on Earth. No seriously, that is true, it takes about one year for venus to make a complete rotation (i dont mean revolution, but rotation like spinning a basket ball.) Actually Venus rotates in about 243 Earth days and that's only about 8 months, not a year. One day on Venus is about 243 Earth days long. There are 24 hours in a day on Earth, 243 x 24=5832 hours. That's the rotation period, known as the "sidereal day". But it's more complicated than that because you're ignoring the "solar day". The solar day depends on a planet's motion round the Sun as well as its spin. For Venus the solar day is about 116.75 Earth days. That's about 116.75 x 24 = 2802 hours.
Mercury - 4222.56 hours (175.94 Earth days) Venus - 2802 hours (116.75 Earth days) Mars - 24.659789 hours Earth - 24 hours Uranus - 17.239722 hours Neptune - 16.11 hours Saturn - 10.543333 hours Jupiter - 9.9258333 hours These are the "solar days" not the "sidereal days" (period of rotation). The differences between these "days" are large for Mercury and Venus.
Venus, which rotates backwards in comparison to Earth, takes 243 days to make a full rotation on its axis.
Venus takes 243.0185 Earth days (5832.444 hours) to rotate once.
116.75 Earth days.
45 days