After Mercury, the planet that takes the least amount of time to orbit the sun is Venus, which orbits the sun in about 225 Earth days.
mercury.
Yes. The planet Uranus is "tilted" in its axis of rotation, with its North Pole facing almost directly toward the sun. Many of its moons would be visible throughout most of their orbits, since they are seen looking "down" from "above them". If the planet were not so cold (sometimes within 60° C of absolute zero), the effect of the Sun heating ONLY the northern hemisphere of the planet would create unique weather patterns, to say the least.
TrES-4 is actually a star. It appears to have at least one planet. I don't think we have the technology yet to detect any moons around the planet.
neptune and Pluto are the two planets (altho Pluto is not officially a planet any more) that we know the least about because they are the ferrets away in the solar system and there for get the least amount of attention. but apart from mars and venus we do not know that much more about the other planets.
I Say Mercury.
No planets revolve around earth they revolve around the sun.
mercury, it only takes 88 days. The closer the planet is to the parent star (sun in our case) the less time it takes to complete one orbit. Mercury is the closest planet to the sun and the planet to take the shortest time to orbit it.
After Mercury, the planet that takes the least amount of time to orbit the sun is Venus, which orbits the sun in about 225 Earth days.
If you are asking what planet has the least days in a full trip around the sun, it would be the planet Mercury, the moon has the least days in a trip with 29, however it is not counted as a planet.
Venus has the longest period of rotation. It's about 243 Earth days.
mercury.
Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun, completes an orbit in just 88 Earth days.
Because it has the shortest year, as it is the closest planet to the sun.
Saturn is the least dense of the gas giants, even out of all of the planets in our solar system. Its average density is around 0.7 g/cc (less than water).
Mercury has the smallest mass of the planets.3.3022 × 1023 kg which is about 0.055 that of Earth
Yes, at least 13. They are not very bright though.