a day is how long it takes the object to revolve one time. Pluto is smaller than the earth but it rotates much slower. The moon revolves around the earth at the same rate it rotates. That is why we see the same side of the moon at all times;
No. The day on slowly-rotating Pluto is about 6.4 Earth days long.
Pluto rotates much more slowly than Earth so a day on Pluto is much longer than a day on Earth. A day on Pluto is 6.4 Earth days or 153.3 hours long.
Pluto orbits the sun, as does Saturn, but Saturn is closer to the sun than Pluto is, so Pluto has much further to go to orbit the sun. Pluto's orbit is longer than Saturn's.
A day on Pluto lasts about 153 Earth hours, or more than six Earth days.
Pluto does not make a full rotation in an Earth day. In one Earth day, pluto has only rotated about 15% of the way.A full rotation on Pluto is about 6.4 Earth days.
One Earth day = 0.15625 Pluto daysIn other words, a 24-hr Earth day is about 15% of a Pluto day.
i am pretty sure Mercury, venus, and Pluto
Venus is the only planet in our solar system where a day (rotation on its axis) is longer than a year (orbit around the sun). A day on Venus lasts around 243 Earth days, while a year (orbital period) is approximately 225 Earth days.
A day on pluto is ^.$ earth days wich is really 6.4 earth days.
None, unless you are talking about the dwarf planet Pluto in which the planet's day is longer than it's year.
An "Earth day" is longer than a day on Uranus. A day on Uranus is only about 17 hours and 14 minutes long.
Pluto takes more than a day to rotate. It takes about 6.39 Earth days.