Uranus
Inertia is trying to pull the planet away from the sun and gravity is pulling the planet toward the sun so the both inertia and gravity steer the planet around the sun
The planet Mars, which is the fourth planet from the sun, takes 1.88 Earth years to make one full orbit around the sun.
The planet you are referring to is the dwarf planet Pluto, which takes just over 248 years to orbit the Sun.
There is no planet that revolves around the Sun with a period of 288 years.
the planet takes almost 2 earth years to orbit the sun is Jupiter
The planet seems to roll around the Sun rather than spin, resulting in each pole experiencing 21 years of sunlight and 21 years of darkness!
Alas this planet only has the one sun, so if the sun is on one side of the planet then the other side would be in darkness.
Inertia is trying to pull the planet away from the sun and gravity is pulling the planet toward the sun so the both inertia and gravity steer the planet around the sun
The planet Mars, which is the fourth planet from the sun, takes 1.88 Earth years to make one full orbit around the sun.
No. The Sun was never a planet, and the Sun will never turn into a planet. In about 5 billion years, the Sun will expand into a red giant star. It will last that way for another billion or so years, and then slowly shrink down into a brown dwarf star.
The answer is the sun.
The planet you are referring to is the dwarf planet Pluto, which takes just over 248 years to orbit the Sun.
Neptune, the furthest planet from the sun, takes around 164 years to make one orbit of the sun (164.79132 years).
There is no planet that revolves around the Sun with a period of 288 years.
You might be thinking of Pluto, a dwarf planet, orbits the sun every 247.68 years. Pluto, however, is not a planet.
The point would be in darkness for the complete rotation of the planet
the planet takes almost 2 earth years to orbit the sun is Jupiter