It would take hundreds of years.
The planets line up about every 10,000 years.
The time it takes to get from one planet to another depends on the departure and arrival planets. It can take about two years to get from Earth to Mars where it will take about six years to get from Earth to Jupiter.
all of them
All planets with a greater orbit than the Earth.MarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
All the planets closer to the Sun than Saturn complete orbits faster than 29,4 years (Saturn's orbital period) Jupiter 11.8 years Mars 1.9 years Earth 1 year Venus 0.615 years Mercury 0.24 years
In all probability, all the planets are about the same age. They formed around the same time as all of the other planets give or take a few million years.
Old the planets are. Billions of years old are all of them.
They all have days and years, but they are all of different lengths to days and years on Earth.
The planets line up about every 10,000 years.
the mass and the weight of all gas planets. And when you form them to be all as one then you can make sure that you see the solar system as one and you want to be perfect with the way that you do it. So when you take all the planets together and you take away the ones that are not gas planets then you add the mass and the weight of the planets and then you get the general composition of all of the basic inner planets.
The time it takes to get from one planet to another depends on the departure and arrival planets. It can take about two years to get from Earth to Mars where it will take about six years to get from Earth to Jupiter.
All the planets are prehistoric (meaning they predate written history) since all of them are 4.5 billion years old.
PlanetYears to orbit sunMercury0.24Venus0.62Earth1.00Mars1.88Jupiter11.86Saturn29.46Uranus84.32Neptune164.79
All of them.
all of them
All of them
All planets with a greater orbit than the Earth.MarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune