It takes 224.7 earth days for Venus to orbit the sun.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars and Jupiter.
Mars takes longer to orbit the sun than Mercury because it is farther away from the sun and orbits at a greater distance. This means Mars has a longer path to travel around the sun, resulting in a longer orbital period. Mercury, being closer to the sun, has a shorter path to travel and completes its orbit more quickly.
The closer a planet is to the sun, the faster it revolves around the sun, so Mercury and Venus take less time to go around the sun than Earth, and Mars and the gas giants take longer.
Venus' orbital period is 224.7 earth days.
The two closer to the sun than the earth, mercury and Venus. The further you go out from the sun, the longer it takes to orbit it.
Mercury and Venus take less time to orbit the Sun than the Earth does. ummm...if you need 5 then...earth, venus, mercury, mars and jupiter
Saturn. This is untrue. Both Mercury and Venus have shorter orbits and therefore take less time to orbit the Sun, because they are the two planets closer to the Sun then Earth. Saturn is further from the Sun and takes much longer to orbit it.
It takes 224.7 earth days for Venus to orbit the sun.
Venus takes longer than Earth to complete one rotation on its axis. A day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus, as it rotates very slowly clockwise. Mercury also takes longer than Earth to complete one rotation due to its slow spin.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars and Jupiter.
Planets closer to the sun than Earth orbit the sun in less than one year (Mercury and Venus), while planets further out from the sun than Earth take longer than a year (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune). The further out you go, the longer it takes to orbit the sun.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars all take less time than Saturn to orbit the sun. Mercury has the shortest orbital period, completing an orbit in about 88 Earth days. Venus takes about 225 Earth days, Earth takes 365 days, and Mars takes about 687 Earth days.
Earth takes a lot longer to make one complete order around the sun than Mercury does. The time required for Mercury to make one orbit is equal to 88 Earth days (whereas one orbit for Earth is about 365 Earth days).
Mars takes longer to orbit the sun than Mercury because it is farther away from the sun and orbits at a greater distance. This means Mars has a longer path to travel around the sun, resulting in a longer orbital period. Mercury, being closer to the sun, has a shorter path to travel and completes its orbit more quickly.
Mercury does not orbit the earth - ever!
The closer a planet is to the sun, the faster it revolves around the sun, so Mercury and Venus take less time to go around the sun than Earth, and Mars and the gas giants take longer.