It takes approximately 365.25 earth days of 24 hours each to complete one orbit around the sun.
In calendars we just state 365 days, and we make up for the 0.25 days omitted in this calculation once every four years. This is called the 'leap year', where we have 366 days instead, with an extra day in February.
There is no such thing as a space day. If you mean "star date", I don't know what the actual chronology of Star Trek is, but it makes sense that if we got other solar systems we'd devise a calendar that wasn't based on the movement of earth around our sun, which would tell you a universally accepted "space date", or star date.
it is 10.66 hours on earth that equal one day on Saturn
It depends on your way of traveling to space (100km/62mi) above the Earth's surface. A rocket takes a matter of minutes to reach outter space.
17 hours and 15 minutes is the earth- equivalent time for a single Uranus day.This means that 0.65 Earth days is equal to one of Uranus's days.
1 day on the moon is as long as 29.5 days on earth.
One day on Saturn is roughly 10-11 earth hours
It takes 365.4 days
one
365
Earth has gravity and space does not.
if the earth did not have an atmosphere, than many rocks from space would have striked the earth's surface by now.
14 martian days x 24.623 earth hours in a martian day = 344.72 earth hours
A day on Jupiter is less than 10 Earth hours
lol 60miles
10004522
It will take about not minutes not hours not days even not moths but years it will take to get to space 4 or 5 years.
In space there is no fixed time like earth. As there is 24 hours sun not like earth with day and night.
the earth spins on it axis
6 hours
It depends how far into space you are and how fast. It takes 180 years to get to Pluto and back. It takes a couple of hours to go to the moon and back.
Earth has gravity and space does not.
16 hours or 0.67125 earth days
An earth day is divided into 24 hours.
hundreds of hours.
Space probes leave Earth, they do not go toit.
8,760 Earth hours in one year.