Neptune.
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.
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.
Neptune is the only planet that takes longer than Uranus to orbit the Sun.
Venus has a rotation (spin) time of 243 Earth days, and a revolution (orbit) time of 224.7 Earth days, making it the planet with longer days than years.
Yes. The grater the distance, the longer an object takes to orbit.
Technically, since Pluto is no longer a planet, but a dwarf planet, Uranus is the planet that takes the longest to orbit the sun.
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.
Pluto takes 248.09 Earth years to orbit the Sun once. However, please note that Pluto is no longer classified as a planet (like Earth, Mars, Jupiter etc.), it is now a 'dwarf planet'.
Mercury takes the most least time to orbit the sun. It takes 88 days.