Yes. A Martian day is about 40 minutes longer than an Earth day.
Mars has a similar day length to Earth, a little longer at 24h 39m 35s (apparent solar day).
Mars's day-length is close to that of Earth: 24.7 hours. As such, there are 1.03 Martian days per every one Earth day; or, alternatively, 0.97 Earth days per every one Martian day.
Approx. 24.63 hours. so it very similar to Earth's.
This depends on what you are specifically referring to. A "day" can be defined as one full rotation of a planet around its axis; as such, relative to Mars itself, Mars will complete one rotation per every one Martian day. Relative to Earth, however, the answer would be different. Mars's day-length is close to that of Earth: 24.7 hours. As such, there are 1.03 Martian days per every one Earth day; or, alternatively, 0.97 Earth days per every one Martian day.
The martian year is 687 earth days, or nearly 2 earth years. Since the martian day is a little longer than an earth day, the martian year is only about 669 martian days in length.
Mars is very similar to Earth. Mars' year and day are very similar to Earth compared to other planets.
The length of a Martian day is equal to 1.027491204 Earth days. The length of one sidereal Martian year is equal to 1.880791 sidereal Earth years.
356. There are about 0.975 Martian days in one Earth day, and 365.25 Earth days in one Earth year, and 0.975 * 365.25 ≈ 356.009.
It takes 1.88 Earth years for Mars to go once around the Sun. The Martian day is about 25 hours long.
The day lengths are very similar. Earth has a 24 hour day. This is the"solar day". Earth spins once in about 4 minutes less time than the solar day and that's called the sidereal day. Mars spins once in about 24 hours 37 minutes. The solar day on Mars is about 2 minutes longer.
The period of rotation is the Martian day, with a length of 24.62 Earth hours (24 hours, 37 minutes, or 1.026 Earth days). The "solar day" is slightly longer, as on Earth, and is about 24 hours, 39 minutes. The Martian "year" (revolution around the Sun) is about 687 Earth days (1.88 Earth years). A Martian day (which the Mars Rover scientists call "sols") is about 24 hours 40 minutes.
The time it takes to make one spin on its axis relative to the background stars is 24h:37min:22.67sec.