1 year. The Earth takes 1 Earth year, Mars 1 Mars year, Venus 1 Venus year, etc.
Here's the answer in detail using approximate numbers :
Mercury 88 Earth days.
Venus 225 Earth days
Earth 365 Earth days
Mars 687 Earth days
Jupiter 11.9 Earth years
Saturn 29.5 Earth years
Uranus 84 Earth years
Neptune 165 Earth years
It depends on how close that planet is to the sun. At closer distances, the planets move more quickly where the gravity from the star is stronger, they also have a shorter path to complete. At further distances, the planets have a lower tangential velocity, they move along more slowly and have much further to travel, so take longer to complete one orbit.
There is a relationship between the planets distance from the sun and the time taken for one orbit (planets year), 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.
365.2 days
yes it does
Planet Neptune takes the most time to orbit the sun, as it is the farthest away.
Neptune takes 164.79 Earth years to orbit the sun once.
A year. Any planet, any length of time, for that planet once around the sun is their year.
After Mercury, the planet that takes the least amount of time to orbit the sun is Venus, which orbits the sun in about 225 Earth days.
yes it does
The length of time it takes to make a complete orbit around the sun.
The length of time it takes for a planet to orbit the sun is based on its distance from the sun, not its mass. The farther a planet is from the sun, the larger its orbital path, and the longer it takes to complete an orbit.
The time Eris takes to orbit the Sun is about 557 years.The length of Eris's orbit around the Sun is about 60 billion kilometers
A year. Each planet in a solar system has a year of different length, equal to the time it takes for one complete orbit around its sun.
A planet year is defined as the time it takes a planet to make one complete revolution in its orbit around the sun. The farther away from the sun a planet is, the larger its orbit. The larger its orbit, the longer (more days) it takes to go around the sun. Thus, the farther away a planet is from the sun, the longer its year will be.
True. The length of time that it takes to complete one orbit around the Sun is directly related to the distance of the orbit from the Sun.
The eight planets are in order in their various places. If a planet is closer to the Sun, it will have a shorter orbit and therefore will take less time to complete its orbit. If a planet is farther away from the Sun, it will have a longer orbit and will take more time to complete its orbit. For example, Earth, the third planet from the Sun and takes just a year to revolutionize it, but since Uranus, the seventh planet, is farther away from the Sun, it will take 81 years to complete its orbit.
Planet Neptune takes the most time to orbit the sun, as it is the farthest away.
Depends on which planet/sun!Neptune!!
No planet orbits Earth.
Mercury takes the most least time to orbit the sun. It takes 88 days.