Longer. A day on Mars is around 39 minutes longer than a day on Earth, and it also takes Mars 668 days to make one trip around the sun (which means that seasons on Mars are also nearly twice as long as seasons on Earth are).
yes because if u search that up u would seee
Jupiter is less dense and has a shorter period of rotation.
The sidereal rotation period of Mars - one spin on its axis relative to background stars, is 24.623 hours. This is very similar to the earths sidereal rotation period.
Ceres' rotation has no effect on the earths rotation. Ceres rotational period is equal to one day on Ceres.
That is only an average. Your cycle can be longer or shorter.
yes because if u search that up u would seee
Jupiter is less dense and has a shorter period of rotation.
A shorter pendulum has a shorter period. A longer pendulum has a longer period.
The Martian "day" (rotation period) is 24 hours and 37 minutes - a little over 1/2 hour longer than earths day.
An asteroid/meteor impact is one theory. The truth is that nobody knows for sure, just like the exact origin of the moon is not known for certain.
Mars rotates 24h 37m 22.7s* Earth's rotation is 23h 56m 4.100s
24 hours! To be exact, it's about 4 minutes less than that.
The earth's period of rotation is a few minutes short of 24 hours, whereas the moon's period of rotation is a bit over 27 days.
The sidereal rotation period of Mars - one spin on its axis relative to background stars, is 24.623 hours. This is very similar to the earths sidereal rotation period.
Ceres' rotation has no effect on the earths rotation. Ceres rotational period is equal to one day on Ceres.
That is only an average. Your cycle can be longer or shorter.
There is no set number of days a period, sometimes they are shorter and sometimes they are longer