no
Saturn completes one orbit around the Sun in 29.4571 years.
Pluto's not a planet. but it takes 36 earth years to orbit.
165 earth years
Mercury takes 87.969 days to orbit the sun.
The relationship between the size of an orbit and the time taken by a planet to orbit the sun is described by Kepler's Third Law of Planetary Motion. This law states that the square of the orbital period (the time taken to complete one orbit) of a planet is directly proportional to the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit (the average distance from the sun). In simpler terms, the larger the orbit, the longer it takes for the planet to complete its revolution around the sun. Thus, planets farther from the sun take significantly longer to orbit compared to those closer in.
Bhaskaracharya
200,000,0000
That is a "year" for that planet.
more than a million years
Ages
Keplar showed that there is a relationship between the planets distance from the sun and the time taken for one orbit (planets year). This is described in Keplars third law; the square root of the time taken to orbit the sun is proportional to the cube of the average distance between the sun.
Mars takes about 687 Earth days to orbit the Sun once.