Mercurythe closest planet..according to my Science teacher.
Sorry teacher is not right this time. Jupiter is the answer.
A revolution on Mars, which is the time it takes for the planet to orbit the Sun, lasts about 687 Earth days. This is approximately 1.88 Earth years. As a result, Martian years are almost twice as long as Earth years.
Pluto. It's a dwarf planet that takes 248 earth years to make one orbit of the sun.
if i went to mars to check without being trained i would die
The planet that has the shortest period of revolution is Mercury, which is 88 days. The planet with the longest revolution is Neptune, which is 165 years. Earth's revolution is the third shortest.
Jupiter's revolution is approximately 11.86 years (4,333 days)
Time on Earth began approximately 4.5 billion years ago, with the formation of the planet.
The planet with the shortest revolution period of approximately 11 years and 313 days is Neptune. This is because it is the eighth planet from the Sun and orbits at a much greater distance compared to the inner planets, resulting in a longer orbital period due to Kepler's laws of planetary motion. Neptune's eccentric orbit and gravitational interactions also contribute to its specific revolution time, marking it as one of the slowest orbiting planets in our solar system.
Neptune has an orbital period, or revolution time, of about 165 Earth years. This means it takes Neptune approximately 165 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun.
Technically, since Pluto is no longer a planet, but a dwarf planet, Uranus is the planet that takes the longest to orbit the sun.
The rotation of a planet refers to the planet spinning like a top; a "revolution" is the time required for the planet's orbit around the Sun.
The one that is the biggest distance away, that's Neptune 164 years, but dwarf planet Eris takes 550 years.
While Pluto was discovered in 1930 and was considered fully a planet for 76 years, and it takes 248 years for it to complete one revolution, it did not complete one full revolution in the time those on Earth have known of it. But, Pluto has existed for about four and a half billion years, and in that time can be expected to have completed 18,145,161.3 orbits of Sol.