Mercury spins very slowly on its axis, only once every 58.6 Earth days (relative to background stars).
However, the comparatively short Mercury "year" (just 88 Earth days) has dramatic consequences for the length of the "solar day" -- sunrise to sunrise -- on the planet. A solar (apparent) day on Mercury takes 176 Earth days, which is effectively twice the length of the year. Basically, as the planet is turning, the motion around the Sun is counteracting the effect. (We see something similar on Earth, where the Moon's west-to-east orbit keeps it in the night sky longer than any of the stars.)
Mercury's sidereal period is 58.646 earth days.
The period of rotation for Mercury around the Sunis 88 Earthdays.
Actually, astronomers call this the "period of revolution".
The sidereal day is the rotation period of a planet. For Mercury that's about
58.6 Earth days.
The sidereal rotation period is 1407.5 Earth hours, or 58.646 Earth days.
However, the solar day is 176 Earth days (see the related question).
88 days
Mercury has the 2nd longest "sidereal day" with a sidereal rotation period of 58.646 Earth days. The longest "sidereal day" day is Venus, with a sidereal rotation period of 243.018 Earth daysIf you use the "solar day" as your definition of "day", the order is reversed. Mercury then has the longest day and Venus has the second longest day.
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.
Period of rotation is about 58.65 Earth days.
IT IS not The same Period of rotation Because tthe mercury have rotation g9 days and the pluto have a rotation 6.4 days so it is not the same BY:JULLIA TUTANES :P
In the time it takes Mercury to complete one rotation, Neptune rotates 87.37 times.
Mercury is probably the closest with a sidereal rotation period of 58.646 days
The sidereal rotation period is 9.925 hours
Sidereal Rotation: 58.646 earth daysRevolution: 87.97 days.
Mercury has the 2nd longest "sidereal day" with a sidereal rotation period of 58.646 Earth days. The longest "sidereal day" day is Venus, with a sidereal rotation period of 243.018 Earth daysIf you use the "solar day" as your definition of "day", the order is reversed. Mercury then has the longest day and Venus has the second longest day.
0.3781 days.
A Mercury day (sidereal rotation period) is 58.646 earth days = 1407.5 hours.
The sun has two types of period of rotation, the sidereal rotation period and the synodic rotation period. The sidereal rotation period is 24.47 days. The synodic rotation period is 26.24 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.
Year: 88 Earth days. Rotation period (sidereal day): 58.6 Earth days. Solar day: 176 Earth days.
Rotation period : about 58.5 Earth days. That's known as a "sidereal day". There is also the "solar day". That's about 176 Earth days.
The sidereal rotation period of the Moon is just a bit under 27 days and 8 hours.
The rotation period of Mercury is 58.65 days.