365 days
Each planet in our solar system revolves around the sun in an elliptical orbit. The time it takes for a planet to complete one revolution around the sun is known as its orbital period. This period varies for each planet based on its distance from the sun.
Each planet has a different rotation speed around the sun. Erth takes 365 days,Mercury takes 88 days, so there is no spped for all the planets
For a planet in our solar system, one revolution around the Sun is called a "year." Each planet has a different year. As you know, Earth takes 365.25 days to follow its orbit around the Sun, though Jupiter's year is about 4335 earth days. It all depends on how long it takes each one to revolve around the Sun.
Because they each have a certain path that they follow, and the paths do not intersect.
Typically, this length of time is called a "year". Each planet's year is a different length than that of the other planets and increases as the planet is further from the Sun.
The planets revolve around the sun each year. The year for each planet is different because it either takes the planet longer or shorter to get around the sun than other planets. The year of each panet is mesured by how many Earth days or years it takes to get around the sun.Length of Planetary Year in Earth Days/Years:Mercury: 88 daysVenus: 225 daysEarth: 365.25 daysMars: 687 days or 1.88 yearsJupiter: 4,331.5 days or 11.86 yearsSaturn: 10,832 days or 29.46 yearsUranus: 30,799 days or 84 yearsNeptune: 60,190 days or 165 yearsPluto (dwarf planet): 90,410.5 days or 247.7 years
Mercury takes about 88 Earth days, Venus takes about 225 Earth days, Earth takes 365 days, Mars takes about 687 Earth days, Jupiter takes about 12 Earth years, Saturn takes about 29 Earth years, Uranus takes about 84 Earth years, and Neptune takes about 165 Earth years to revolve around the sun.
365.24 days. 365.
Every complete circle is 360o.
-- The sun rotates on its axis, in periods ranging from 26 to 32 days depending on the latitude of the material doing the rotating ... since the sun is not solid, there's no reason that all of it must rotate at the same rate. -- All of the planets revolve around the sun, each one in a different amount of time. The farther a planet is from the sun, the longer it takes to revolve around it. -- It takes the Earth roughly 365 1/4 days to revolve around the sun. We call that amount of time a "year", an "año", a "shanah", etc., depending on where we live.
No, the rotation of a planet on it's axis, or it's spin is not really related to the time it takes to orbit or revolve around the sun. For example, Mercury and Venus are the closest planets to the sun, yet they take a long time to rotate on their axis.
The sun actually doesn't revolve, but each planet revolves around the sun. Earth revolves around it in 365 days, but other planets revolve in different amounts of time, depending on their distance from the sun.