Jupiter orbits the sun much more slowly than the Earth does.
The close-in ones move fast, the far-out ones move slower. It's governed by Kepler's third law.
The moon's velocity affects its orbit around the Earth. The moon's velocity must be balanced with the gravitational pull of the Earth to maintain its orbit. If the velocity is too slow, the moon may fall towards the Earth; if it is too fast, the moon may move away from the Earth.
Well Venus keeps stopping and starting and crashing because its where women come from right? so its pretty fast when it should be slow and really slow when it should be fast. good question by the way.
Saturn's rotation is relatively fast, taking about 10.7 hours to complete one full rotation on its axis. However, its revolution around the Sun is slower, taking about 29.5 Earth years to complete one orbit.
Pluto orbits the sun at an average speed of about 10,500 miles per hour (17,700 kilometers per hour). It takes approximately 248 Earth years for Pluto to complete one orbit around the sun due to its distance and elliptical orbit.
Uranus moves at an average speed of about 6.8 kilometers per second (4.2 miles per second) in its orbit around the Sun. Compared to other planets in our solar system, Uranus moves at a moderate speed, slower than Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars but faster than Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune.
Most of the time they get around by the current, so they are not that fast, it depends on the current
Because it goes slower and its orbit around the Sun is bigger, Jupiter's year is longer than Earth's year.
The time for one complete rotation is about 59 Earth days - exactly 2/3 of the time it takes for Mercury to complete one orbit around the Sun. -Golfmad
It rotates slow but quicker on its axis
not a fast but slow
slow-fast-slow (Apex)