Venus does, roughly speaking. Its year is 224.7 Earth days. It has a "solar day " of about 116.75 Earth days.
Venus (a "day" is 116.75 Earth days long).
Venus (a "day" is 116.75 Earth days long).
You would think that the largest planet, Jupiter, would rotate the slowest (every 9 earth days and 15 minutes), but it is actually Venus that rotates the slowest at one rotation every 243 earth days.
Venus is the only planet in our solar system that rotates clockwise. It also rotates very, very slowly - taking 243 earth days to rotate once.
Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun in our Solar System. It rotates very slowly on its axis. The length of one day on Mercury is equal to 58 days, 15 hours and 30 minutes on Earth.
The Earth rotates on its axis, which we perceive as days, and revolves around the sun, which we perceive as years.
The length of a planet's day depends on the speed of its rotation. Mars rotates slightly more slowly than Earth does, and so it has a slightly longer day.
It is about 243 of our days, as Venus rotates very slowly.
It is about 243 of our days, as Venus rotates very slowly.
There is no planet that takes 25 days to rotate on its axis. However, the equator of the sun rotates in about 25 days. (Not all of the sun rotates at the same speed, it slows down as it gets closer to the poles. At the poles, the sun rotates in about 36 days, and in the middle it takes about 30 days.)
Venus