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.
A planet in an elliptical (oval) orbit will move faster as it gets to its closest point to its sun, and slow down as it reaches its furthest point. A planet with a truly circular orbit will have a constant speed.
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.
Electrons do not move fast.
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.
It rotates slow but quicker on its axis
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's in an elliptical orbit around the Sun, like all the planets. So its distance from the Sun varies. When it's nearest to the Sun it moves fastest. (This can be explained from the Law of Gravitation.)
vrey slow because it takes 29.5 years to orbit around the sun 1 time.
not a fast but slow
They have orbit maintaining rockets to keep them in place. They are traveling fast enough not to be pulled all the way back to the Earth. If they go to slow they will burn up on the way in.