No. One "lunar day" is 29.5 days.
The Moon "year" is basically the same as the Earth's, because they orbit the Sun together. That's about 365.25 Earth days. A Moon "day" is about 27.3 or 29.5 Earth days, depending on the definition used for day. So, the answer is "shorter".
because the sun and moon are getting closer to earth and stuff like that i think
A day on the moon is about 29.5 Earth days long, which is roughly equivalent to a lunar month. A year on the moon, however, is about the same length as a year on Earth, as it takes the moon approximately 27.3 Earth days to complete one orbit around the Earth.
Without the moon, Earth would spin faster. Our day would be shorter. Billions of years ago, Earth spun around on its axis much faster. Our world's cycle of day and night was less than ten hours long. The ebb and flow of the tides are what put the brakes on Earth's spin. The moon and sun together cause the tides. If we'd never had a moon, we'd still have tides, but they wouldn't be as strong. So - if you're imagining Earth with no moon - you have to imagine our day on Earth much shorter than our present-day 24 hours.
Neptune has a shorter day than Earth, it spins once on its axis in 16 hours and 6 minutes, compared to 24 hours for Earth.
The Earth rotates in 1 day. The moon takes 27.32 days to rotate.
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It's to do with the length of time a planet takes to spin, a planet that spins on its axis faster than the earth will have a shorter apparent day.
A day on Uranus is shorter than a day on Earth. Earth's day is roughly 24 hours long. A day on Uranus is 17 hours, 14 minutes long.
well as Saturn is further away from the sun. the sun, represents day.Therefore a shorter day. :)
well as Saturn is further away from the sun. the sun, represents day.Therefore a shorter day. :)
A day on Jupiter is shorter than a day on Earth because Jupiter rotates much faster on its axis compared to Earth. This rapid rotation causes Jupiter to complete a full rotation in about 10 hours, leading to shorter day length.