The following is the number of days (approximately) that it takes for each planet to orbit the Sun:
Mercury 87.6
Venus 222.65
Mars 686.2
Jupiter 4,332.55
Saturn 10,749.25
Uranus 30,685.55
Neptune 60,188.5
The period of rotation for each of the planets is as follows - the sidereal rotation (rotation time against background stars). A negative number represent a planet with a clockwise (retrograde) spin.
PlanetSidereal rotational period
Mercury
58.646225Venus -243.0187Earth 0.99726957Mars 1.02595675Jupiter 0.41007Saturn 0.426Uranus -0.71833Neptune 0.67125
It takes Earth 365 and 1/4 days to complete an orbit.
6.5 is how many earth days it take for one day
Uranus which has an orbital period of 84.016846 years which is 30,687.153 days.
The sidereal day is the time it takes for a planet to rotate once. For Venus that's about 243 of our Earth days.
theearth takes a year
Each planet is different, due to size and distance from the sun. The Earth takes 365 days or 1 year to rotate.
This is planet Earth, so one Earth day is one day on this planet.
There are 365.25 days in the Earth's revolution around the Sun. Hence, leap years. Each planet has its own period of revolution.
The ratio will always be the same so the answer will be 500 to both questions
A Mercury 'year' is 88 earth days.
27.32 days
About 27 days, on average.
It takes Earth 365 and 1/4 days to complete an orbit.
365
In the context of your question, a "Day" is defined as the time it takes for a planet to rotate once on its axis, that is (for a solar day) the time between the instant that the sun is, for example, directly overhead, to the next time the sun is directly overhead. Since each planet rotates at a different rate, each planet's own "day" is different. Only Mercury and Venus have days that are "many" times longer than Earth. Mar's day is 1.03 times longer than Earth's, and the outer planets actually have days that are shorter than Earth's, that is, they rotate very rapidly.
686.971 Earth days
6.5 is how many earth days it take for one day