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No planet in the solar system has a longer orbit than Jupiter. Jupiter has the longest orbital period, taking approximately 11.9 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun.
Jupiter takes much longer to orbit our sun due to its further distance from the sun. The further a planet is from the central star, the slower its orbital speed and the longer it will take.
Jupiter does not orbit the earth. It takes 11.86 years for Jupiter to orbit the sun.
Scientists don't know that yet, but there's no rule that says smaller mass must have shorter orbit. Look at the planets: the biggest is Jupiter and the outer planets have longer orbits.
63 known moons orbit Jupiter.
a year basically means how long it takes for a planet to make a complete orbit around its sun... the earth's is 364.25 days. Planets farther than ours e.g. mars, Jupiter etc. have longer orbit therefore take longer to complete an orbit around the sun, therefore a longer year :)
Well, basically different planets take longer to orbit the Sun. For example, Jupiter takes longer to orbit than earth, so Jupiter has a longer year. On Venus, a day lasts longer than a year as it takes longer to spin on its axis that to orbit the sun.
Jupiter travels at 13.72 km/s, compared to Mar's orbital velocity of 24.13 km/s. Jupiter also has a longer distance to travel because it is further from the Sun. Therefore, Jupiter's orbit takes 4,330 days to Mars' 686 days. It all follows Kepler's 3rd law of planetary motion very nicely..
No planet in the solar system has a longer orbit than Jupiter. Jupiter has the longest orbital period, taking approximately 11.9 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun.
Jupiter has an orbital period of 4,331.5 Earth days or about 11.86 years. Its orbit is much longer than Earth's, and it also moves more slowly in its orbit. Jupiter's orbit is roughly 11.86 Earth years long.
Because it is further from the Sun than Jupiter and thus has further to travel.
Example: Jupiter travels at 13.72 km/s, compared to Mars' orbital velocity of 24.13 km/s. Jupiter also has a longer distance to travel because it is further from the Sun. Therefore, Jupiter's orbit takes 4,330 days to Mars' 686 days. It all follows Kepler's 3rd law of planetary motion very nicely. Notice that it has nothing to do with the planet's mass.
It would have a longer year, because it is further away from the Sun, and so would take a longer time to orbit it. A year is dictated by how long we take to orbit the Sun. Yes and in fact Jupiter takes about 11.9 Earth years to orbit the Sun.
11.86 years (in Earth Years)
Jupiter takes much longer to orbit our sun due to its further distance from the sun. The further a planet is from the central star, the slower its orbital speed and the longer it will take.
Jupiter does not orbit the earth. It takes 11.86 years for Jupiter to orbit the sun.
Scientists don't know that yet, but there's no rule that says smaller mass must have shorter orbit. Look at the planets: the biggest is Jupiter and the outer planets have longer orbits.