Sunrise to following sunrise on Venus takes 116.75 days, so two or three sunrises will occur in one Earth year, depending on the start position. A Venusian year is shorter, so only one or two Venusian sunrises will occur during one Venusian year.
Venus takes 243 days to spin on its axis relative to the background stars, while it takes 224.7 days to orbit the sun. Although its spin on its axis is longer than its orbital period, an apparent day is 116.75 days, since it spins in the other direction to Earth and most other planets.
One year on Venus is about 224 Earth days.
sometimes not even one a venusian day is longer than its year
A year on Venus is 224 Earth days and a day is 243 Earth days. This answer isn't bad, but remember the Solar day is "only" about 117 Earth days on Venus. I like the Solar day. It takes Venus about 243 Earth days to rotate once and that's what is called a Sidereal day.
The rotational period of Venus is not the same as its solar day. It takes about 243 Earth days for Venus to make one slow spin, and it is in the opposite (retrograde) direction from its orbit. It can be said to spin clockwise, or east to west.At the same time, it takes only 224.7 Earth days for Venus to orbit the Sun (its year). So the "day" on Venus is actually longer than the year!(1 Venus year = 0.925 Venus sidereal day)HoweverThe result of these two motions produces a "solar day" (sunrise to sunrise) of about 116.75 Earth days on the planet, although obviously the sunrise cannot be seen from the surface.(1 Venus year = 1.92 solar days)
This may be a vague reference to the fact that there are roughly 2 of Venus's "solar days" in one Venus year.
A Saturnian day is 0.44 Earth days long and It year is 29.45 Earth years long. So Duing one orbital period Saturn has about 24,440 sunrises.
One year on Venus is about 224 Earth days.
One year on Venus is approximately 224.7 Earth days.
1 Venusian year = 224.7 Earth days.
It takes about 243 days in (rotation) in an earth day to cover venus.
About 225 days. (Venus revolves around the Sun in about 224.7 Earth days.)
sometimes not even one a venusian day is longer than its year
A year on Venus is 224 Earth days and a day is 243 Earth days. This answer isn't bad, but remember the Solar day is "only" about 117 Earth days on Venus. I like the Solar day. It takes Venus about 243 Earth days to rotate once and that's what is called a Sidereal day.
One interesting fact about Venus is that a day on Venus is actually longer than a year on Venus. A Venusian day lasts 243 days, and a year is 224 days. That means that the day on Venus is 19 days longer than the year.
224.7 Earth days
The rotational period of Venus is not the same as its solar day. It takes about 243 Earth days for Venus to make one slow spin, and it is in the opposite (retrograde) direction from its orbit. It can be said to spin clockwise, or east to west.At the same time, it takes only 224.7 Earth days for Venus to orbit the Sun (its year). So the "day" on Venus is actually longer than the year!(1 Venus year = 0.925 Venus sidereal day)HoweverThe result of these two motions produces a "solar day" (sunrise to sunrise) of about 116.75 Earth days on the planet, although obviously the sunrise cannot be seen from the surface.(1 Venus year = 1.92 solar days)
A Venus day (spin) is 1.08 times as long as a Venus year.The very slow rotational day of Venus is 243 Earth days long, while its year (one orbit of the Sun) is only about 225 Earth days. Combined with the retrograde direction of its spin, this produces a "solar day" (sunrise to sunrise) of about 116.75 Earth days.So in terms of rotation, there is only 0.925 days in a Venus year. In terms of daylight experienced on the surface, there are 1.92 Venus days per Venus year.