Each planets has a different length of time it takes to make a full rotation. The approximate lengths are: Mercury: 58 days, Venus: 243 days, Earth: 24 hours, Mars: 24 hours, Jupiter: 10 hours, Saturn: 11 hours, Uranus: 17 hours and Neptune: 16 hours.
They all have days and years, but they are all of different lengths to days and years on Earth.
200,000,0000
what planets did the romans use to name the days of the week
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune
All planets have an axis. Thus, the answer is no.
The years for all the planets except Mercury (88 Earth days) are all "over 200 days", the closest one to that number being Venus at 225 Earth days.
It depends on the planet and how fast it's going. Also, planets further from the sun have a longer path to travel. for example: Mercury only takes 88 days because it has a shorter path than all the other planets. Earth takes 1 year.Here are all the orbital periods of the planets measured in Earth days and Earth years:Mercury: 87.97 days (0.2 years)Venus : 224.70 days (0.6 years)Earth: 365.26 days (1 year)Mars: 686.98 days (1.9 years)Jupiter: 4,332.82 days (11.9 years)Saturn: 10,755.70 days (29.5 years)Uranus: 30,687.15 days (84 years)Neptune: 60,190.03 days (164.8 years)
None of the four outer planets, they all have rotational periods shorter than 24 hours. The dwarf planet Pluto has a rotational period of 6.4 days though.
Each planet has a different rotation speed around the sun. Erth takes 365 days,Mercury takes 88 days, so there is no spped for all the planets
The sun shines on Saturn ... and on all of the other planets too ... everyday.
it varies
All planets have a core.