No. All the planets rotate at different speeds. Typical days for each planet are shown below:
1) Mercury - 176 Earth days
2) Venus - 116 Earth days
3) Earth - 24 hours
4) Mars - 24 hours, 39 minutes, and 35.244 seconds
5) Jupiter - 6 days
6) Saturn - 10 hours and 39 minutes.
Each of the planets has different orbital periods to go around the sun, such as:
1) Mercury - 88 Earth days
2) Venus - 224 Earth days
3) Earth - 1 year
4) Mars - 687 Earth days
5) Jupiter - 12 Earth Years
6) Saturn - 29.6 Earth Years.
Mercury doesn't "have planets".
Because the stars are relatively so far away, all planets of this solar system have the same number of stars near them.
the mars is the number four in the planets
No, not all seasons have the same number of days. Winter, spring, summer, and fall each have different lengths. Winter typically has around 88 days, spring has around 92 days, summer has around 94 days, and fall has around 90 days.
They're not.
Mercury doesn't "have planets".
No, the planets have different number of moons, from zero to about 60-70.
No. Different planets have different speeds of rotation and different lengths of year. As a result, they experience a different number of days. Here are the number of days in each planet's year with earth days in parentheses Mercury: 0.5 days (88 Earth days) Venus: 1.92 (243 Earth days) Earth: 365.25 Mars: 668.6 (687 Earth days) Jupiter: 10,476 (4,333 Earth days) Saturn: 24,491 (10,759 Earth days) Uranus: 42,718 (30,799 Earth days) Neptune: 89,666 (60,190 Earth days)
For planet Earth, one revolution around the Sun takes one year, or 365.25+/- days.
The time it takes a planet to orbit the sun - what would be equivalent to one year for that planet - is not the same for each one. The orbital periods for the planets within our solar system (as measured by Earth days) are: Mercury - 88 days Venus - 224.7 days Earth - 365.2 days Mars - 687 days Jupiter - 4331 days Saturn - 10,747 days Uranus - 30,589 days Neptune - 59,800 days Pluto - 90, 588 days.
what planets did the romans use to name the days of the week
Because the stars are relatively so far away, all planets of this solar system have the same number of stars near them.
the mars is the number four in the planets
No two planets share the same moon.
No, not all planets have the same number of moons. For example, Mercury and Venus have no moons, Earth has one moon, Mars has two moons, while Jupiter has over 70 moons. The number of moons can vary from planet to planet.
July and August
Because