All except Neptune for people who grow to 84 or more.
More than you would in a lifetime More than you would in a lifetime
more than a lifetime
Lonely planet is trying to keep up with Fromers on being travel guide books. Hard part even though lonely planet has more pictures Fromers has been around and has name recognition from one of the first times most of us traveled.
Yes, it can. The higher the planet's mass, the more satellites it can attract at greater distances, and the more it can keep in orbit around it.
Rome has so much culture, history and architecture...more than anybody could tackle in his lifetime.
A Lifetime or More was created in 2003.
The further a planet is from the sun, the longer its year is. This is because a planet's year is determined by how long it takes to complete one orbit around the sun, with larger orbits taking more time to complete.
Yes, it can. The higher the planet's mass, the more satellites it can attract at greater distances, and the more it can keep in orbit around it.
Yes, the planet is called Bellerophon. See link for more details.
Assuming other aspects of the scenario are the same, yes. The object on the planet with weaker gravity will accelerate more slowly toward the ground, so it will have more time to travel forward.
The nearest star is more than 4 light-years away, we do not have the technology to travel that far within a human lifetime.
A year by definition is the time it takes a planet to orbit the Sun, therefore a planet year is different depending on what planet you are discussing. a planet closer to the Sun would have a shorter year (less distance to travel) whereas a planet farther from the Sun would have a longer year (more distance to travel)This is the time taken for the planet to orbit once around the sun. An earth year is still an earth year, regardless of what plaet you are on.The period of time that it takes for a planet in our solar system to make a complete revolution around the sun.As such due to their differing orbits this can vary considerably from an 88 day year for Mercury (approx. 1/4 of an Earth year) up to a 90,613 day year for Pluto (approx. 248 Earth years).