Mars, with a orbital period of around 687 days.
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 Mars, which is the fourth planet from the sun, takes 1.88 Earth years to make one full orbit around the sun.
MARS
No planet, under the 2006 IAU definition of a planet, takes 557 Earth years to orbit the Sun. Perhaps you are talking about dwarf planets. If so, please restate the question.
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).
The dwarf planet Pluto. No "planet" takes that time.
There is no planet that revolves around the Sun with a period of 288 years.
If you still consider Pluto a planet, than Pluto takes the longest time to move around the sun. If not, Neptune takes the longest amount of time.
The planet Mars, which is the fourth planet from the sun, takes 1.88 Earth years to make one full orbit around the sun.
Neptune
Mars.
Uranus
The dwarf planet Pluto
MARS
No planet, under the 2006 IAU definition of a planet, takes 557 Earth years to orbit the Sun. Perhaps you are talking about dwarf planets. If so, please restate the question.