Mercury with 88 daysVenus with 224.7 days
There are no solar planets that orbit the Sun in less than 24 hours. The closest, Mercury, takes about 88 days to orbit the Sun.
The two closer to the sun than the earth, mercury and Venus. The further you go out from the sun, the longer it takes to orbit it.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars and Jupiter.
it is the 2 planets that are before the earth mercury and venus
Moons are approximately spherical objects which orbit planets and are smaller than the planets that they orbit, although they are still relatively large objects (so an orbiting dust particle does not qualify as a moon). Since moons orbit planets, their motion around the solar system is controlled by the planets that they orbit; planets orbit the sun, and planets take their moons with them.
Yes, comets orbit the sun, but usually in an eliptical (oval) or eccentric orbit rather than a more-or-less circular one like the planets.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars all take less time than Saturn to orbit the sun. Mercury has the shortest orbital period, completing an orbit in about 88 Earth days. Venus takes about 225 Earth days, Earth takes 365 days, and Mars takes about 687 Earth days.
Planets that are closer to the Sun (Mercury and Venus) take less time to orbit the Sun. Imagine it like a circular race track. If everyone started at the same spot the person closest to the inside of the circle would have a smaller distance to run than the person on the outside of the circle. However there's another factor too. The closer a planet is to the Sun, the faster it moves in its orbit.
Venus and Mercury
Mar, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Inner planets have a radius orbit shorter than the orbit of Jupiter. Outer planets are all the other planets of the solar system.