The longest day of the year is during the summer solstice which on June 21st
day
1 year is longer than 1 day
Venus "sidereal day" is longer than its year. Mercury's "solar day" is longer than its year. However, there is no planet in our solar system with a day longer than our year on Earth.
Venus
No, a planet's day cannot be longer than its year. A day is defined as the time it takes for a planet to complete one full rotation on its axis, while a year is the time it takes for the planet to complete one orbit around its star. A planet's year is always longer than its day.
Yes, it is possible for a planet's day to be longer than its year. This situation can occur when a planet rotates very slowly on its axis compared to the time it takes to orbit around its star. Venus is an example of a planet with a longer day (243 Earth days) than its year (225 Earth days).
A leap year is 1 day longer. Mathematically it's 1/365th longer than a regular year.
On this planet, a day is longer than a year because the planet has a very slow rotation on its axis. This means it takes longer for the planet to complete one full rotation (a day) than it does to complete one orbit around its star (a year).
the farther away from the sun the day must be longer.
yes when its on other planets ,it can be.
One interesting fact about Venus is that a day on Venus is actually longer than a year on Venus. A Venusian day lasts 243 days, and a year is 224 days. That means that the day on Venus is 19 days longer than the year.
That depends entirely on where you live. In the northern hemisphere, June 21 is the longest day of the year and the further north you live, the longer the day will be. In the southern hemisphere, the longest day of the year is December 21 and the further south you live the longer the day will be!