365.26 days
The 0.26 day difference between the normal 365-day year is accounted for by adding an extra day each leap year.
One Martian year is approximately TWO Terrestial (Earth) Years.
The Moon can go around the Earth, and does so once every 28 daysA Boat can go around the Earth, so long as there are open waters along the path taken.A Plane can go around the Earth, so long as it has enough fuel to do so.This leaves the Sun. It cannot - and will not - go around (or orbit) the Earth, simply because it is significantly more massive and has a greater force of gravity. Instead, the Earth orbits around the sun.
The planet that takes 248.5 Earth years to orbit the Sun is Neptune. It is the eighth planet in our solar system and has a very long orbital period due to its distance from the Sun.
The Earth moves round the Sun in a path called an orbit. All the planets go round the Sun in their own orbits, that way they do not collide. For the Earth, one whole circle round the Sun takes exactly one year.
This would depend on the planet, earth takes a year to go round the sun but that is because we named the time it takes for us to go round the sun a "year". The closer to the sun a planet is the less time it takes to circle it.
1 year
One year.
A year - 365.2422 days.
no, the earth orbits around the sun
15 days to 2 hours
Sun's Gravitational force.
It takes 686.971 earth days for Mars to go once around the sun.
The Earth goes around the Sun in just over 365 days, or 1 year, as you have already mentioned. :P
Saturn takes 10759 days to go round.
One Martian year is approximately TWO Terrestial (Earth) Years.
It takes Jupiter approximately 11.9 Earth years to orbit the Sun once.
No I one DAy