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The real "planet" with the longest year is Neptune It takes 165 Earth Years. Mercury has the shortest year. It is closest to the Sun and therefore the Suns gravity acts upon it with more strength
well think about it the planets closer to the sun have the fastest orbit so knowing that the planets are already in order from shortest to longest orbit.
Stellar distances are measured in light-years, which is the average distance between the Earth and the Sun.
The change in the length of the day is due to the tilt of the Earth. You will have your longest day of the year when you live of the part of the Earth that is tilted towards the Sun.
Of the known planets in the solar system, Mercury, being nearest to the sun, completes its orbit in the shortest time . . . 88 earth days.
The real "planet" with the longest year is Neptune It takes 165 Earth Years. Mercury has the shortest year. It is closest to the Sun and therefore the Suns gravity acts upon it with more strength
no
the distance between the earth and sun is shortest in the month of...
yes
The earth's prbit around the sun is not circular, it is an ellipse. the earth is further from the sun at the ends of the ellipse than when it is in the middle. The length of day is a local effect, based on the angling of the earth's axis towards the sun. When the days are longest in the northern hemisphere they are shortest in the southern hemisphere, and vice versa. These days occur when the earth is at its orbit's greatest distance from the sun. When the days are closest to being as long as the nights, the earth is at its orbit's shortest distance from the sun. When the earth is nearest the sun it receives a greater amount of energy than when it is further away.
No, it takes the shortest.
One day, the day the sun stays out the longest or stays out the shortest!
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Note that its only true in the northern hemisphere. That's the day (usually) that the Earth's north pole point most directly at the sun, thus the the day that the sun seems to be highest in the sky, thus the longest day (and shortest night).
Note that its only true in the northern hemisphere. That's the day (usually) that the Earth's north pole point most directly at the sun, thus the the day that the sun seems to be highest in the sky, thus the longest day (and shortest night).
well think about it the planets closer to the sun have the fastest orbit so knowing that the planets are already in order from shortest to longest orbit.
Aphelion