This depends on what you are specifically referring to. A "day" can be defined as one full rotation of a planet around its axis; as such, relative to Mars itself, Mars will complete one rotation per every one Martian day.
Relative to Earth, however, the answer would be different. Mars's day-length is close to that of Earth: 24.7 hours. As such, there are 1.03 Martian days per every one Earth Day; or, alternatively, 0.97 Earth days per every one Martian day.
12
One- one full turn= one full day
one rotation is one day. one day takes 24 hours seven rotations is seven day ( one week) one week takes 168 hours Answered by Salis
24 hours
About one. Mars rotates in about 24 hours and 37 minutes.
About one. Mars rotates in about 24 hours and 37 minutes.
24 hours
13.369 rotations, and 12.368 cycles of phases.
one earth minute = one mars minute in other word, one minute is one minute everywhere in the universe, same as one second. but one earth day would be different from one mars day as the we use the time it take the earth to finish one rotation as one earth day.
The length of a day on the planet Mars is 24 hours and 37 minutes. One year on the planet is equal to 680 days on Earth.
24 hours and 40 minutes
There are 8 planets, they complete revolutions round the Sun and rotations on their own axes, all with different time periods. These planets complete one rotation in less than one Earth day: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. (Mars takes about 24.6 hours.)