About 18,121,638,816 kilometres.
force
31,518 miles.
Different planets have different length orbits because they are at varying distances from the sun. The farther a planet is from the sun, the longer it takes to complete an orbit. This is due to the gravitational pull of the sun, which affects the speed at which planets travel around it.
The planet's rotational period is the only thing that determines the length of one day. (mostly - it also is dependent on how fast the planet orbits the sun. If it orbits quickly, the "day" will be measurably less than the time for one full rotation.)
The length of the planet's year would be affected.
The Prospero satellite, launched in 1971, has an orbital period of approximately 100 minutes. It orbits Earth at an altitude of about 1,000 kilometers. The specific orbital length can vary slightly due to its elliptical orbit, but it generally completes about 14 orbits per day.
-- Your weight is, as long as you're standing on the Earth or some other planet, but it's different in different places. -- Also, the speed of the moons, comets, asteroids and planets in their orbits, and also the length of time it takes them to revolve in their orbits.
Orbits is the plural form for the noun orbit; the plural possessive form is orbits'.
pLURAL ; orbits Possessive plural ; Orbits' (NB note the position of the apostrophe).
Approximately 7.66 hours. That's obviously the moon "Phobos", but there is another moon called Deimos which orbits in about 30.3 hours.
No, the length of day and night varies throughout the year due to the tilt of the Earth's axis as it orbits the sun. This results in the changing seasons and varying lengths of daylight and darkness.
orbits