Mercury holds the record for the fastest revolution around the Sun, completing an orbit in about 88 Earth days. Its close proximity to the Sun results in a faster orbital speed compared to other planets in our solar system.
Mercury has the fastest revolution around the sun, taking around 88 Earth days to complete one orbit.
The planet Mercury is named after the messenger god.
because the mercury is the fastest to revolve around the sun than any other
The fastest is Mercury.
Mercury holds the record for the fastest revolution around the Sun, completing an orbit in about 88 Earth days. Its close proximity to the Sun results in a faster orbital speed compared to other planets in our solar system.
I'm not quite sure what the question is talking about, but that has never stopped me before. There is only one star in the solar system, so by every law, lemma, and conjecture of mathematical impenetrability, that one and the largest one must be one and the same. It is the one we call the "Sun". The fastest revolution known around the sun is that of the planet Mercury, which completes an orbital circuit of the sun every 88 days. If there is any object with a shorter period of revolution, then all or most of its orbit must be closer to the sun than the orbit of Mercury. No such object has yet been discovered.
Oh, how wonderful! You must be a planet, dear friend. Your quick journey around the largest star in our solar system, the Sun, makes you none other than the swift and lovely Mercury. Embrace your unique orbit and shine brightly in the vast expanse of space.
fastest revolution
The planet Mercury has the fastest movement in our solar system.
Mercury has the fastest revolution around the sun, taking around 88 Earth days to complete one orbit.
In our solar system there is only one star let alone any "largest star" so the phrasing of the question seems a bit confusing. Does the question mean a solar system somewhere out there that has a double star at its center with celestial objects revolving around the larger of those two stars??? Anyway, the planet Mercury revolves around our Sun or star faster than any of the other planets, that being 88 days. But maybe this isn't even a correct answer. After all, just because Mercury takes fewer days to revolve around the Sun, that doesn't mean it is moving "fastest" around the Sun. However, according to astronomy today (see related links), Mercury does indeed have the fastest orbital velocity, moving at 47.87 km per second.
Mercury is the fastest revolving planet. The speed of a particular planet depends on its revolution around the sun as well as its rotation on its own axis. The fastest planet of the solar system with reference to revolution is Mercury. On the other hand, the fastest planet with reference to rotation is Jupiter.
In our solar system there is only one star let alone any "largest star" so the phrasing of the question seems a bit confusing. Does the question mean a solar system somewhere out there that has a double star at its center with celestial objects revolving around the larger of those two stars??? Anyway, the planet Mercury revolves around our Sun or star faster than any of the other planets, that being 88 days. But maybe this isn't even a correct answer. After all, just because Mercury takes fewer days to revolve around the Sun, that doesn't mean it is moving "fastest" around the Sun. However, according to astronomy today (see related links), Mercury does indeed have the fastest orbital velocity, moving at 47.87 km per second.
The planet Mercury is named after the messenger god.
Yes, Earth does spin faster than Mercury.For more details, visit this NASA site:http:/www.nasa.gov/worldbook/mercury_worldbook.html
Being the planet closest to the Sun, Mercury is the planet that travels fastest in its orbit, and the planet that completes an orbital revolution in the shortest time. Mercury circles the sun in only 88 earth days.