1.025957 days (about 24 hours and 37 minutes).
Mars rotates in about the same time as Earth. One spin takes about 1.0257
Earth days.
It's not. A day on Mars (a sidereal rotation period) is 1.026 Earth days.
the answer is... Mars!
No
Mars.
Mars completes one orbit around the sun every 686.971 days.
Mars rotates on its axis (one sidereal day) with a rotation period of 1.0256 Earth days or 24.622 hours. Mars orbits the Sun in 686.971 Earth days or 1.8808 Earth years or 668.6 Martian days. Mars has to have a leap year every third year and subtract a day or add two days.
Earth The sidereal rotational period of Mars is 1.025 957 days (ie 24.62296 hours) The sidereal rotational period of Earth is 0.99726968 day (ie 23h 56m 4.100s)
Rotation means the planet spinning about it axis. (Orbit the the path of the planet round the Sun). The planet Mercury has a rotational period of 58.646 Earth days. The planet Venus has a (retrograde) rotational period of 243.0185 Earth days. The planet Mars has a rotational period of 1.025957 Earth days. The planet Jupiter has a rotational period of 9.925 hours. Obviously Earth has a rotational period of 1 Earth day.
its revolution period is 687 (Earth) days.And its rotation period is 24 hours, 39 minutes
686.971 days .
mars is 2 earth days jupiter is 92 earth days
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.