Earth's orbit around the Sun can be approximated by a circle. The radius is the Earth-Sun distance, which is about 150 million kilometers. If you multiply that by 2 x pi, you get the circumference - i.e., the yearly path.
For the Earth, approximately 365 days. Completing one orbit around the Sun defines the length of a year for a planet.
The sun doesn't circle the earth, the earth circles the sun. The earth turns completely around in one day.
It circles the Earth in an oval shape.
365 and a quarter days, hence a leap year every four years.
If you talking about Earth that would be 365 days.
It should be obvious that it depends on how fast you travel. The circumference of the Sun is about 4.4 million kilometers. Divide that by your speed to get the time required.
The earth is always going around the sun. It finishes an entire trip
every 365.23 days. We call that period of time a "year".
About once every 27 days
No planet goes around the Earth. The Moon, Earth's satellite orbits around the Earth, once ever 27 days and 7 hours.
A year on Mars is 687 earth days, which is the time it takes for it to make one orbit of the sun.
No. The Earth orbits the Sun once in 365.24 days
The Moon orbits Earth just once in 27.3 days.
The Moon revolves round the Earth and rotates on its own axis once every 27.3 days.
it takes 271/3 days
About once every 27 days
About once every 27 days
The Earth orbits the sun once per year (which is the definition of a year).
It takes 686.971 earth days for Mars to go once around the sun.
40,100 kilometers.
No planet goes around the Earth. The Moon, Earth's satellite orbits around the Earth, once ever 27 days and 7 hours.
365.24 days.
once a year... -_-
A year on Mars is 687 earth days, which is the time it takes for it to make one orbit of the sun.
The Earth rotates once on it's axis once every 24 hour. It takes the Earth over 365 days to orbit the Sun.