Earth rotates roughly 365 and 1/4 times in a year, the extra 1/4 results in an extra day every 4 years, or a "leap year".
An Earth year is equivalent to one year on Earth, which is approximately 365 days.
Most of the time, a year is 365 days. Leap years contain 366 days.
This question is meaningless. An Earth day would be the same length no matter what planet you are on. An Earth day would be the equivalent of 0.004 Venus days and about the same number of Venus year (it takes a whole year for Venus to go round its orbit). A Venus day is 243 Earth days. That's 243 Earth days to rotate once. Astronomers call this a sidereal day. However there is also the solar day of 117 Earth days.
1 Earth year is Earth 365 days normally, or 366 Earth days for a leap year.
The exact length, in days, of Earth's true sidereal orbital period is 365.256366 (364 and 1/4 ) days or 1.0000175 years. As this is not a whole number of days, our Earth calender is arranged to have normal years and leap years. We make a normal year have 365 days and a leap year have 366 days. We arrange it so that a leap year happens every 4th year so that extra day makes up for the four 1/4 days we need make the orbit position the same over time.
365 1/4 days a year
There are not days on the Sun as we experience on Earth. The Sun does rotate on its axis, but it takes about 27 Earth days for one complete rotation.
once every 365.25 days.. (a whole year)
Pluto orbits the sun once every 246 Earth years . . . 89,865 Earth days.But it takes Pluto 6.387 Earth days to rotate once , so its year is only 14,070 Pluto days.
It takes the earth 365 days to rotate around the sun.365 days also means 1 year.
it exactly takes 4,331 earth days for Jupiter to rotate in a year.
It takes Mercury about 88 Earth days, Venus about 225 Earth days, Earth about 365 days, Mars about 687 Earth days, Jupiter about 4,333 Earth days, Saturn about 10,759 Earth days, Uranus about 30,687 Earth days, and Neptune about 60,190 Earth days to orbit the sun.
earth is the only plantet that can rotate. All planets rotate. In the case of mercury its rotation period exactly equals its year (about 88 earth days) so that one unchanging side faces the sun for the same reason (strong tidal effects) that the same face of the moon always faces the earth.
Mars rotates on its axis once every 24.6 hours, which is very similar to Earth's rotation period.
59 Earth days to rotate on its axis, 87.96 Earth days to orbit the sun.
it takes a year for the earth to revovle that is what makes up a year
thats how long it takes for the earth to rotate around the sun.