Mars, with a orbital period of around 687 days, almost two Earth years (which would be 730 days).
Saturn. It takes around 29.5 years to orbit our sun.
Pluto takes 248.09 Earth years to orbit the Sun once. However, please note that Pluto is no longer classified as a planet (like Earth, Mars, Jupiter etc.), it is now a 'dwarf planet'.
Yes. A year is how long it takes for Earth to orbit (go the whole way around) the sun. So if it's further out, then it takes longer to orbit, thus a longer year.
No planet orbits Earth.
the planet takes almost 2 earth years to orbit the sun is Jupiter
Venus has a rotation (spin) time of 243 Earth days, and a revolution (orbit) time of 224.7 Earth days, making it the planet with longer days than years.
A year for a planet is the time it takes for that planet to orbit the sun. Some planets take longer to orbit the sun because they are farther away from the sun than Earth, so those planets have a farther distance to cover to orbit the sun once than the Earth does.
Mars. The further out from the sun, the longer a planet takes to revolve round the sun. For example, Pluto's orbit takes over 200 (Earth) years.
a year is determined on how long the planet takes to orbit the sun. When calculating the year of a planet we use earth days. __________________ Yes, distance counts. The farther a planet is from the sun, the longer it takes that planet to complete one full orbit.
Pluto
Neptune.
The planet Mars, which is the fourth planet from the sun, takes 1.88 Earth years to make one full orbit around the sun.