Neptune.
The planet that has the shortest period of revolution is Mercury, which is 88 days. The planet with the longest revolution is Neptune, which is 165 years. Earth's revolution is the third shortest.
If you mean revolution on it axis (spin/day length) rather than orbital period, then the answer is the planet Mercury, where time between sunrises is roughly 176 Earth days.
How does a planet's distance from the sun affect its period of revolution?
Neptune has the longest orbital period, which is equal to 59,800 Earth days. Pluto's is even longer (90,588 Earth days), but it has since been reclassified as a dwarf planet.
Mars has roughly twice the Earth's period of revolution.
Pluto has the longest REVOLUTION period Venus has the longest ROTATION period
Neptune.
The planet that has the shortest period of revolution is Mercury, which is 88 days. The planet with the longest revolution is Neptune, which is 165 years. Earth's revolution is the third shortest.
If you mean revolution on it axis (spin/day length) rather than orbital period, then the answer is the planet Mercury, where time between sunrises is roughly 176 Earth days.
No. The period of revolution depends on the size of the orbit of the planet.
How does a planet's distance from the sun affect its period of revolution?
Neptune has the longest orbital period, which is equal to 59,800 Earth days. Pluto's is even longer (90,588 Earth days), but it has since been reclassified as a dwarf planet.
Mercury is the shortest and Neptune is the longest
Mars.
The gas giant that has the longest revolution is the planet Neptune.
Mars has roughly twice the Earth's period of revolution.
Technically, since Pluto is no longer a planet, but a dwarf planet, Uranus is the planet that takes the longest to orbit the sun.