Mercury - Length of Year: 88 Earth Days | Day Lasts: 4222.6 Earth Hours (175.94 Earth Days)
Venus - Length of Year: 224.7 Earth Days | Day Lasts: 2802 Earth Hours (2778 Earth Days)
Mars - Length of Year: 1 Earth Year 322 Earth Days | Day Lasts: 24.6597 Earth Hours (1.02 Earth Days)
Jupiter - Length of Year: 11.86 Earth Years | Day Lasts: 9.9259 Earth Hours (0.44 Earth Days)
Saturn - Length of Year: 29.5 Earth Years | Day Lasts: 10.656 Earth Hours (0.43 Earth Days)
Neptune - Length of Year: 164.79 Earth Years | Day Lasts: 16.11 Earth Hours (0.7 Earth Days)
Uranus - Length of Year: 84 Earth Years | Day Lasts: 17.24 Earth Hours (0.7 Earth Days)
Pluto - Length of Year: 248.5 Earth Years | Day Lasts: 153 Earth Hours (6.4 Earth Days)
Mercury completely revolves around the sun once every 58.647 days.
Improved answer:
You are both getting mixed up. There's no planet
that orbits in this time. Mercury spins on its axis in about 58.65 Earth
days. Mercury orbits the Sun in about 88 Earth days.
Mercury because that is how long it takes for it to rotate once on its axis. :)
The planet Mercury takes about 58.6 Earth days to spin once on its axis.
There is no such planet. Mercury spins on its axis once in about 59 Earth days.
There are no planets in our solar system that take 59 hours to rotate.
The Earth takes 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4 seconds to make a complete rotation.
Mercury
venus takes 243 earth days to complete one day. its days are actually longer than its years at it takes 225 earth days to orbit the sun.
It takes Venus about 225 days to orbit once around the Sun. It takes Venus 243 days to rotate once on its axis.
No planet has a revolution and rotation that takes 27 days. The Moon rotates once every 27 days and revolves around the Earth once every 27 days.
It rotates once in 27.32 days - the same time that it takes to orbit once around the Earth - which is why it always looks the same from Earth.
About 27 days Since the sun is not solid, it rotates at different rates at different latitudes. One rotation takes 36 days at the poles but only 25 days at the equator.
Venus.
0.44401 days.
It depends which planet you mean - the Earth takes 23 hours & 56 minutes to rotate once.
it takes 365 days for the earth to go around the sun once.
Neptune takes 16 hours 6 minutes and 36 seconds to rotate or spin once on its axis, or 0.67125 Earth days.
It takes Venus about 243 days to rotate once on its axis. This makes one day of Venus equal to 243 days on Earth.
Mercury. Its takes around 58.65 days to rotate once on its axis relative to background stars.
A year is the time it takes a planet to rotate about its star and a 'day' is the time it takes a planet to rotate once on its axis. Thus as the Sun is a star the concept of a 'year' is irrelevant as it is at the centre of all rotation. In relation to 'day' however, the Sun does rotate on its axis, it takes 25.38 (Earth) days to rotate once at the equator but as it is made of gas, it does not rotate all together like a solid body and the area round the poles rotates more slowly, taking 34.4 (Earth) days to make a revolution.
The sidereal day is the time it takes for a planet to rotate once. For Venus that's about 243 of our Earth days.
Venus takes approximately 243 Earth days to rotate just once!
venus takes 243 earth days to complete one day. its days are actually longer than its years at it takes 225 earth days to orbit the sun.
The Earth takes 23h56m to rotate once around its axis.