The Earth takes about 365.25 days so just multiply that by 24 and you have the answer.
There's a good NASA page for this question. I will add it as a "related link".
See below and click on it.
For each planet you need to multiply the number of days by 24, of course.
The outer planets take longer to orbit the Sun, because they are farther away from the Sun. It make its gravitational pull weaker to the farther planets. That means that the outer planets take longer to orbit the Sun.
Moons are approximately spherical objects which orbit planets and are smaller than the planets that they orbit, although they are still relatively large objects (so an orbiting dust particle does not qualify as a moon). Since moons orbit planets, their motion around the solar system is controlled by the planets that they orbit; planets orbit the sun, and planets take their moons with them.
neptune
The outer planets take longer.
no, they orbit planets to take images of them.
Planets do not take steps. Each planet has its own orbit and is is different.
No, and the earth does not, either.
The outer planets take longer to orbit the Sun, because they are farther away from the Sun. It make its gravitational pull weaker to the farther planets. That means that the outer planets take longer to orbit the Sun.
365 days
Elliptical Orbit
The sun doesn't orbit anything, the planets orbit the sun, and our moon orbits us. It takes 24 hours forthe moon to orbit us once and 365 days for the earth to orbit the sun once
About 655 hours.
The outer planets take longer to orbit the Sun, because they are farther away from the Sun. It make its gravitational pull weaker to the farther planets. That means that the outer planets take longer to orbit the Sun.
365.256363004 days = 8,766.15271 hours
ORBIT
1.800
Mercury takes 87.97 days to orbit the Sun, and there are 24 hours in a day.