365 day, that's how we measure 1 year
There are 365 days in a year.
Earth rotates on its axis and it revolves around the sun. Both things conserve earth's angular momentum. Each rotation is a day, and each solar revolution is a year. The days and years both help us mark the passage of time. Other than that, there are not too many similarities.
Jupiter takes 11.86 years to orbit once around the sun, which is 4332 days.
2 years, Watch the movie 2012 and you will know!
the moon takes 24 hours to spin once on its axis and the earth spins Anticlockwise No, the moon takes around 28 days to rotate once on its own axis. However, using the moon as an analogy is a fine way to help think through how many times the earth rotates on its own axis in one year. As we all know, one side of the moon always faces the earth. If you were on the moon, you would see no "days" go by relative to the earth, so-to-speak, loosely, if you see what I mean. Then, if the earth moved around the sun like the moon moves around the earth, with one side always facing the sun, besides being mighty hot on one side, during one year (one revolution around the sun) it will have rotated one time on its own axis, and yet you would see no sunrise or sunset. So, zero "days" equal one revolution. Therefore 365 days equal 366 revolutions on its own axis during one year, and that is the answer. Try a dime and a quarter on the table to help visualize it. Also, remember, the anticlockwise thing (or counter-clockwise) depends on whether you are looking at the earth from "above" the north pole or "below" the south pole.
365 days
it takes 300000000000000 Earth days to make one Revolution
60182 earth days.
365 and 1/4 days
In 365.23 days.
365.23 (rounded)
It takes approximately 88 Earth days for the planet Mercury to complete one revolution around the Sun.
It takes approximately 365.25 days for the Earth to complete one revolution around the sun.
earth takes 365 days to complete it
That's approxamately the amount of days it takes the Earth to make one revolution around the Sun
Mercury takes 88 Earth days for one revolution (orbit) around the Sun (a Mercury "year").
A Mercury 'year' is 88 earth days.