Pluto
On this planet, a day is longer than a year because the planet has a very slow rotation on its axis. This means it takes longer for the planet to complete one full rotation (a day) than it does to complete one orbit around its star (a year).
Neptune is now considered the outermost planet, Pluto is the next one but it is no longer considered a planet.
venus
venus
The Planet Venus has the slowest rotation rate because one day there is longer than the year on Venus or longer than its revolution around the sun.
No, a planet's day cannot be longer than its year. A day is defined as the time it takes for a planet to complete one full rotation on its axis, while a year is the time it takes for the planet to complete one orbit around its star. A planet's year is always longer than its day.
Pluto is no longer considered a planet by major astronomers. It has been reclassified as a Kuiper Belt object- a sort of secondary asteroid belt among the outer planets, not the one between Jupiter and Mars. as such it is no longer a planet.
No planet in our solar system has days longer than one Earth year. Venus has the longest day -- it's 243 Earth days.
It has lifeIt has running waterIt is a planet with only one moon (Pluto used to be one, too, but it's no longer considered a planet)
This statement is commonly used to describe the rotation and revolution of a planet. For example, Mercury's day (one rotation) is longer than its year (one revolution around the sun) due to its slow rotation and fast orbit.
Based on the fact that Planet A has a greater mean distance from the Sun than Planet B, you can correctly infer that Planet A likely has a longer orbital period than Planet B. This is because planets that are farther from the Sun generally take longer to complete one orbit.
Each planet's year is determined by its orbital period, which is the time it takes to complete one orbit around the Sun. The further a planet is from the Sun, the longer its orbital period, resulting in a longer year. This is due to the gravitational force of the Sun, which influences the speed and distance at which each planet orbits.