Not sure I get what you're asking, but if you mean the length of the year, then no. Venus and Mercury travel around the sun faster than the earth.
The syllable "geo-" always has something to do with the earth. The "geo-" "-centric" model has the earth at the center, and the planets revolving around the earth.
The planets travel around the sun in elliptical orbits due to the sun's gravitational pull. This movement is known as the heliocentric model, with the sun at the center of the solar system, contrary to the geocentric model where the Earth was believed to be at the center.
They don't travel around earth they revolve around the sun and they rotate and one trip around the sun takes 365 and 1/4 days
There are no planets that travel around the moon. The moon travels around Earth.
The inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) have shorter orbits and faster speeds, completing their orbits in less time than the outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). The inner planets are closer to the sun, so they experience stronger gravitational forces that cause them to orbit more rapidly, while the outer planets move more slowly due to their greater distance from the sun.
Think about it. Earth travels around the sun in a year. Planets that are closer to the sun, like Mercury and Venus, have a small resolution (path around sun i think its called) so its should be faster.
That's true; all the planets travel in ellipses.
Venus Earth
The Moon's orbital speed is greatest when it is at its closest approach to the Earth.
There are no planets orbiting Earth.
All the planets revolve around the Sun in a counterclockwise direction, as seen from above the Earth's north pole.