A year on Mercury is only 88 Earth days. Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun and has a very short orbital period, causing its year to be much shorter compared to Earth's year of 365 days.
No planet has a revolution and rotation that takes 27 days. The Moon rotates once every 27 days and revolves around the Earth once every 27 days.
One day on Neptune equals 16 hours and 6 minutes. This is the same as about 0.67 of an Earth Day.
Venus or Mercury, depending on the definition of "day" used. It takes Venus 243 Earth days to spin on its axis relative to the background stars (a "sidereal day"). It takes Venus 224.7 Earth days to orbit the Sun (its year). However, a "solar day" is only 116.75 Earth days long due to the combination of rotation time, orbit time and spin direction. (Venus spins in the other direction to Earth and most other planets.)Mercury has a "sidereal day" of about 58.6 Earth days and a year of about 88 Earth days.
Mercury, Venus, and Mars all have longer days, both solar and siderial (rotational) days. Each rotation of Mercury takes 58.65 Earth days, Venus takes 243 Earth days, and Mars takes 1.03 Earth days (24.6 hours). There could be exoplanets with a period of rotation longer than our day. The five dwarf planets (including Pluto) also have a longer rotation period than an Earth day.
Mercury, the closest planet to the sun, has an orbital period (year) equal to 88 Earth days.
Mercury is the planet with an 88-day year.
Venus. Edit: There seems to be a mistake in this question. There is no such planet. But Venus does rotate on its axis in about 243 Earth days. So I guess that the question is about Venus. The orbital period of Venus (a year) is about 225 Earth days.
Mercury's day is about 58.65 Earth days, and its year about 87.97. Venus has a day that is 243.0 Earth days long, while its year is only 224.7.
Mercury has the shortest year of any of the planets. It is only 88 days. Mercury's day takes 58.646 Earth days.
Mercury. Mercury takes 88 days to go around the sun, so its year is 88 solar days.
A year on Mercury is only 88 Earth days. Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun and has a very short orbital period, causing its year to be much shorter compared to Earth's year of 365 days.
The Earth rotates in about 23 hours and 56 minutes. That's called the "sidereal day". The sidereal day on Venus is about 243 Earth days. As a year on Venus is only about 224.7 Earth days, this makes Venus' day longer than its year. Venus is the only planet in our Solar System to have this feature.
No planet has a revolution and rotation that takes 27 days. The Moon rotates once every 27 days and revolves around the Earth once every 27 days.
Because Mercury orbits the Sun much faster than Earth. It takes Earth 365 days to orbit the sun once, but it only takes Mercury 88 days.
The planet Mercury has a day that is almost the same length as its year. Mercury's rotation period is about 59 Earth days, which is very close to its orbital period around the Sun of about 88 Earth days. This means that one day on Mercury is almost as long as one year on Mercury.
The earth is the only planet on earth.