This question is meaningless. An Earth day would be the same length no matter what planet you are on. An Earth day would be the equivalent of 0.004 Venus days and about the same number of Venus year (it takes a whole year for Venus to go round its orbit). A Venus day is 243 Earth days. That's 243 Earth days to rotate once. Astronomers call this a sidereal day. However there is also the solar day of 117 Earth days.
That is 1 day on Jupiter but about 43% of an Earth day.
How much is water made on earth every day
around 29.6
one day
They are not. An Earth day is 1 day, not 365 days.
243 days on earth
Senator Gaylord Nelson (the main founder of Earth Day) had a colleague that had a birthday on earth day so after much thinking and some help he came up with earth day
Jupiter's Ganymede is the largest moon in the solar system. It takes exactly the same amount of time to rotate on its axis as it does to revolve around Jupiter, which is a little over 7 days.
1 Mercury day = 58.6 Earth days
Year: 88 Earth days. Rotation period (sidereal day): 58.6 Earth days. Solar day: 176 Earth days.
Solar day (24 hours for the Earth): about 116.75 Earth days. Sidereal day (rotation period, about 23 hours and 56 minutes for the Earth): about 243 Earth days. Year: about 224.7 Earth days.
365 day 6 hour
Rotation period : about 58.5 Earth days. That's known as a "sidereal day". There is also the "solar day". That's about 176 Earth days.
It is about 117 Earth days (for the "solar day") or 243 Earth days (for the "sidereal day").
58.6 Earth days
Pluto rotates much more slowly than Earth so a day on Pluto is much longer than a day on Earth. A day on Pluto is 6.4 Earth days or 153.3 hours long.