An Earth Day defined as 364.25 days suggests that a complete rotation of the Earth on its axis occurs in that period, which is not accurate according to the current scientific understanding. A standard Earth day is approximately 24 hours, corresponding to the Earth's rotation. The concept of 364.25 days could imply a variation in the calendar system, perhaps accounting for leap years or other adjustments, but it does not reflect the actual time it takes for the Earth to complete one full rotation. Thus, this definition would be misleading within the context of conventional timekeeping.
it would probably be the same nights and days
The days may feel longer after a tsunami but no, the length of the day depends on the earths rotation not tsunamis.
Because they are proper names that define each day of the week. No other set of words can do that.
The length of a day would increase and the number days in a year would decrease.
In a year we have 365.25 days. Now 365 day is ok but .25 remains as it is. So every four year (.25X4) makes a complete one day. So We have February of 29 days. If you the times the .25 by four then you get a whole revolution, thus creating another day.
The speed of Earth's rotation on its axis determines the length of a day. A faster rotation results in shorter days, while a slower rotation results in longer days.
the has an axis and it spins on it axis 27 days so in the arctic region it may take 15 days long so that's short
Earth days are normally rounded to about 24 hours, but in fact the time it takes for Earth to complete a full rotation (i.e. a day) is 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds. A year is approximately 365.24 days.
earths rotation
Mars.
24 hours.
Because the earths magnetic poles move around from year to year, and even day to day.