The farther out, the longer the year.
Keplar showed that there is a relationship between the planets distance from the sun and the time taken for one orbit (planets year). This is described in Keplars third law; the square root of the time taken to orbit the sun is proportional to the cube of the average distance between the sun.
Not at all. The planet's daily rotation is independent of its distance from the Sun.
True. The length of time that it takes to complete one orbit around the Sun is directly related to the distance of the orbit from the Sun.
The further a planet is from the sun the larger it's orbit is around the sun. Mercury's orbit is 223,700,000 miles and takes three Earth months to complete, while Jupiter's orbit is 3,037,000,000 miles and takes almost eleven Earth years to complete.
The square of the time period of revolution is directly proportional to the cube of the mean distance between the planet and its Sun. T2 α R3T = Time Period R = Length of the semi-major axis
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There is no direct relationship between the rotation of a planet (which governs day length) and a planets distance from the sun. The nature of the planets spin is more to do with the formation of the system early on, by large impacts of the more numerous bodies that would have been around.
Keplar showed that there is a relationship between the planets distance from the sun and the time taken for one orbit (planets year). This is described in Keplars third law; the square root of the time taken to orbit the sun is proportional to the cube of the average distance between the sun.
Sum of reciprocal of object distance and reciprocal of image distance gives the reciprocal of focal length
In a concave mirror, the relationship between object distance, image distance, and focal length is described by the mirror formula: 1/f = 1/do + 1/di, where f is the focal length, do is the object distance, and di is the image distance. As the object distance changes, the image distance and focal length will also change accordingly.
There is a relationship between the planets distance from the sun and the time taken for one orbit (planets year), described in Keplers third law. The square root of the time taken to orbit the sun is proportional to the cube of the average distance between the sun.
In photography, the focal length of a lens affects the working distance, which is the distance between the camera and the subject being photographed. A longer focal length typically results in a longer working distance, while a shorter focal length results in a shorter working distance. This relationship is important to consider when composing shots and determining how close or far away you need to be from your subject.
I would prefer to use "distance" instead of "length".distance = speed x time
There is no direct relationship. However another name for length is distance and if you divide time into distance you get speed (if it takes you one hour to travel 10 miles, then you are going at 10 miles an hour).
By unit of length and distance and conversion ,we can say that 1 yard = 36 in
The distance a planet is from the sun influences its year length. Planets closer to the sun have shorter years because they travel a shorter distance to complete one orbit around the sun. Conversely, planets farther from the sun have longer years because they have a greater distance to travel in their orbit.
Time and length are related through motion. The distance traveled by an object (length) is dependent on the time it takes to travel that distance. This relationship is described by the equation: length = speed x time.