Earth days are normally rounded to about 24 hours, but in fact the time it takes for Earth to complete a full rotation (i.e. a day) is 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds. A year is approximately 365.24 days.
It takes 365 days for Earth to orbit the sun. Mercury takes 88 days, Venus takes 224 days, Uranus takes about 84 years, and Mars takes 664 days. Neptune takes 164 years and 9 months to orbit the sun. The planet Jupiter takes almost 12 years and Saturn takes 29 and a half years.
250,000 years
About 41,000 years ago.
A couple billion years, but only if the Mighty Parrot is tired.
Either parsecs or light years (a parsec is about 3.2 light years; it's the distance at which an object shows a parallax of one arc-second when measured on opposite sides of the Earth's orbit).
the length of earths year is 365 days, tho its not really hahaha
Roughly 365.23 days. (rounded)
365.14 earth days
yes
Days & Years.
Days and years.
The days may feel longer after a tsunami but no, the length of the day depends on the earths rotation not tsunamis.
668.5991 Martian days 686.971 Earth Days
Earth's length of year, or orbital period, is approximately 365.25 days. This is the time it takes for Earth to orbit around the Sun once. To account for the extra 0.25 day, we have a leap year every four years with 366 days.
36,525 Days Length of year in days: 365.25 Length of a century in years: 100 365.25 x 100 = 36525
22.8145 years. You divide 8333 by 365.25 (average year length in days)
With 40 leap years, it is 163x365=59495+40=59535