It takes 87.96 Earth days make one Mercury year. At the same time,
Mercury's days are very long though because it has a very slow rotation. 1 Mercury day is equal to 58.7 Earth days.
A year for Mercury is the time it takes to orbit the Sun once. That's about
88 Earth days.
88 earth days.
One Earth day on Mercury lasts two Mercurian years, sunrise to sunrise. It is daytime for one Mercurian year, and nighttime for one Mercurian year.
To get to Mercury you have to wait for 10,000 years to get there, so it would be 10,000 plus 12 22,000 is gonna be your age when you arrive, so that means that no one can get to Mercury, Only space probes, Space probes travel so fast that they get to Mercury in one day!!!!! A 12 year old mercurian would be 12 years old - just that their year is shorter than our (earth) year. Mercury orbits the sun in approx 88 earth days so for every earth year, the mercurians would experience approx 4.15 mercurian years. So in the time someone reaches 12 years old on earth, a mercurian would have reached approx 49.81 mercurian years old. But as the mercurian day is approx 2/3 a mercurian year, a 12 year earthling is approx 4380 earth days old, whereas the 49.81 mercurian is only about 75 mercurian days old.
Mercury orbits the sun once every 88 days, so a 'Mercurian year' is about three months long. For every one Earth year, you will have just over 4 'Mercurian years'.
To understand the length of a day on Mercury, it is important to know the length of a Mercurian year. (Actually you don't need to know that.) Mercury orbits the sun in about 88 Earth days. It rotates on its axis (day) three times for every two orbits around the Sun (year). A Mercurian year lasts about one and a half Mercurian days. That's about 58.65 Earth days for the length of a day on Mercury. Remember though that this is called a "sidereal day". There's also another day called the "solar day". This is based on the apparent journey of the Sun round the sky. For Earth these two days are only slightly different, but for Mercury the difference is huge. The solar day is about 176 Earth days on Mercury.
It sounds complex! It sort of is. Mercury revolves around the sun very quickly, but rotates around its own axis very, very slowly. One day on Mercury (sunrise to sunrise) is longer than one year on Mercury (one orbit around the Sun)!Mercurian Day: A day on Mercury equals 176 Earth days (from sunrise to sunrise, or the equivalent of a 24 hour day on Earth). It is daytime for one Mercurian year, and nighttime for one Mercurian year. (It used to be thought that Mercury always kept the same side side towards the sun, but this is not true.)Mercurian Year: A year on Mercury equals 87.97 Earth days; it takes 87.97 Earth days for Mercury to orbit the sun once.
One Earth day on Mercury lasts two Mercurian years, sunrise to sunrise. It is daytime for one Mercurian year, and nighttime for one Mercurian year.
88 days
Everard Mercurian died in 1580.
Everard Mercurian was born in 1514.
To get to Mercury you have to wait for 10,000 years to get there, so it would be 10,000 plus 12 22,000 is gonna be your age when you arrive, so that means that no one can get to Mercury, Only space probes, Space probes travel so fast that they get to Mercury in one day!!!!! A 12 year old mercurian would be 12 years old - just that their year is shorter than our (earth) year. Mercury orbits the sun in approx 88 earth days so for every earth year, the mercurians would experience approx 4.15 mercurian years. So in the time someone reaches 12 years old on earth, a mercurian would have reached approx 49.81 mercurian years old. But as the mercurian day is approx 2/3 a mercurian year, a 12 year earthling is approx 4380 earth days old, whereas the 49.81 mercurian is only about 75 mercurian days old.
Mercury orbits the sun once every 88 days, so a 'Mercurian year' is about three months long. For every one Earth year, you will have just over 4 'Mercurian years'.
Mercuria.
A year for mercury is shorter. It takes 88 days to orbit the sun, making one year on mercury about 3 earth months long.
One year on Mercury is about 88 Earth days long, 3/4 of a Mercurian day.
To understand the length of a day on Mercury, it is important to know the length of a Mercurian year. (Actually you don't need to know that.) Mercury orbits the sun in about 88 Earth days. It rotates on its axis (day) three times for every two orbits around the Sun (year). A Mercurian year lasts about one and a half Mercurian days. That's about 58.65 Earth days for the length of a day on Mercury. Remember though that this is called a "sidereal day". There's also another day called the "solar day". This is based on the apparent journey of the Sun round the sky. For Earth these two days are only slightly different, but for Mercury the difference is huge. The solar day is about 176 Earth days on Mercury.
Number of Earth Days (and Earth Years) It Takes Each Planet to Complete One Solar Orbit: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Mercury - 87.9691 days (0.240851 year) Venus - 224.698 days (0.615203 year) Earth - 365.25636 days (1.000039 years) Mars - 686.971 days (1.880864 years) Jupiter - 4332.59 days (11.86224 years) Saturn - 10,759.22 days (29.45777 years) Uranus - 30,799.095 days (84.32513 years) Neptune - 60,190.03 days (164.7948 years) One Mercurian year lasts 0.49999 Mercurian day (one Mercurian day lasts two Mercurian years). One Venusian year lasts 1.92461 Venusian days. One Martian year lasts 668.591639 Martian days. One Jovian year lasts 10,475.91235 Jovian days. One Saturnian year lasts 24,491.42713 Saturnian days. One Uranian year lasts 42,876.46114 Uranian days. One Neptunian year lasts 89,668.57356 Neptunian days.
The cast of The Mercurian Invasion - 1998 includes: Carter Blake as Commander Arkwright Ed Bryce as Capt. Steve Strong Margaret Garland as Dr. Joan Dale Michael Harvey as Capt. Steve Strong - segments 1-2 Al Markim as Cadet Astro Jan Merlin as Cadet Roger Manning Dennis Patrick as Lt. Pearson Tom Poston as The Mercurian Leader Frankie Thomas as Cadet Tom Corbett