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Mercury orbits the sun 4.149 times each year
Mercury and Venus, because their orbits are closer to the Sun than Earth' orbit is.
After Mercury, the planet that takes the least amount of time to orbit the sun is Venus, which orbits the sun in about 225 Earth days.
the Hubble doesn't orbit the earth, it orbits the sun slowly fling farther and farther into space.
Yes. One of the physical laws that describe orbits in response to a central force is the fact that the smaller the orbit, the faster the orbiting body travels. Earth's average speed in its orbit around the sun is 18.5 miles (29.8 km) per second. Mercury's average speed in its orbit around the sun is 29.7 miles (47.9 km) per second.
Mercury orbits the sun not the Earth
Mercury takes 88 earth days to orbit the sun. 88 days, is a little less than 3 Earthmonths to orbit the Sun once.it takes 87 earth day to complete a year or one time around the sun
The orbits of Mercury and Venus are between the sun and the orbit of Earth. That is different from saying that Mercury and Venus are between the sun and Earth, which is often not true.
It orbits the sun once every 87.969 earth days. I hope this helps!
It takes one year. That's one "Mercury year", but it only takes about a quarter of an Earth year. It orbits in about 88 Earth days, in fact.
Mercury, because it is the closest to the sun. Mercury takes 88 days to orbit the sun.
No. Ganymede orbits Jupiter. No natural object orbits Mercury.
Saturn does not orbit the Earth; it orbits the Sun. The Moon orbits the Earth.
The plural of orbit is orbits. As in "the moon orbits the Earth".
A year on Mercury takes 87.97 Earth days; it takes 87.97 Earth days for Mercury to orbit the sun once.
Mercury orbits the sun 4.149 times each year
Sun to Mercury's orbit = 57,909,175 km or 35,983,093 miles (0.387 AU) on average Sun to Earth's orbit = 149,597,890 or 92,955,820 miles (1.00AU) Mercury's orbit to Earth's orbit = 91,688,715 km or 56,972,727 miles (0.613 AU) on average. The actual distance between Mercury and Earth will vary a lot though as they are in different orbits.