Mercury is the planet in our solar system that receives light in the shortest time, since it is the closest planet to the Sun. It takes approximately 3.2 minutes for sunlight to travel from the Sun to Mercury.
That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.
You would be the youngest on Neptune (Pluto is no longer a planet) where 1 year = 164.79 years on Earth.
That would be Saturn.
Jupiter: it's the largest.
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Jupiter is the planet with the shortest rotation time. It rotates once every 9 hours and 50 minutes.Jupiter in the planet with the shortest rotation time, with a day approximately 12 hours long.
It would have to be Earth, since it is the only inner planet with oceans.
about five times less than earth
MercuryIn this solar system, that would be Mercury at about 88 Earth days. There have been planets discovered around other stars which blaze around their suns in a matter of hours instead of days.
If you mean by the words "direct route" the shortest distance between two places, distances between two places are shortest at the equator, because of the shape of the planet. If you mean which direction should be traveled to minimize distance, the route taken should be as straight a line as possible.
In our solar system, no planet spins that fast - the planet with the shortest day (or rotational period) would be Jupiter - but it is just under 10 hours.