If you still consider Pluto to be a planet then Pluto would be the slowest to orbit the sun. If you don't believe Pluto is a planet anymore then Neptune would be the slowest planet to orbit our sun.
Curiously, the nearer the planet is to the Sun the faster it orbits. Thus Mercury orbits the fastest, whereas Neptune is the slowest.
No, the closer a planet is to the sun, the faster it orbits.
When it is farthest from the Sun. This point is known as aphelion. *Aphelion = Furthest point from the Sun.
Neptune would move the slowest. The orbit speed is related to the distant the planets are to the sun. Farther the planet, slower the pace. Remember, Pluto is no longer a planet.
The largest planet orbiting the sun is Jupiter.
Curiously, the nearer the planet is to the Sun the faster it orbits. Thus Mercury orbits the fastest, whereas Neptune is the slowest.
Neptune. (Pluto is no longer considered a planet, but, rather, a dwarf planet.)
No, the closer a planet is to the sun, the faster it orbits.
Mercury, is the smallest planet that orbits the sun.
Pluto is the slowest planet to move around the sun, because of its far distance.
Jupiter is the largest known planet which orbits the Sun.
Planets do not revolve around the Sun, they orbit. The planet which orbits slowest is Neptune at about 165 earth years per orbit [Pluto is a dwarf planet and orbits approximately once every 248 earth years].
A planet orbits a star such as the sun. A moon orbits a planet.
No. Earth is a planet. It orbits the sun, which is a star.
The speed of a planet revolving around the Sun is slowest at the aphelion, which is the point in its orbit farthest from the Sun.
The planet that orbits the sun and is the second biggest is Saturn.
Generally, a dwarf planet orbits only the sun, whereas a moon orbits a planet, which in turn orbits a sun.