The time taken depends on the speed of the traveler. At the fastest speed possible, the speed of light, it would take about 5 minutes to get to Mercury at its closest approach. Neptune would take about 4 hours to reach.
At more realistic speeds, like that of the Voyager 2 probe which now moves at a comparatively poky speed of 15km/sec, it takes years to get to the outer planets. The probe was launched in 1977 and reached Neptune in 1989.
The outer planets take longer.
Voyager took 9 years using a favourable positioning of other planets on the way there.
Saturn orbits the Sun like the other planets, it does not orbit anything else. One orbit for Saturn takes 29.4571 Earth years.
noones quite sure yet about if there is life on other planets because there is just no scientific proof of that yet. It would take to long to trave to other planets outside of our solar system because they can be light years away. However when we develope a way to reach the speed of light im sure we'll find out
Mars does not rotate around the Earth. It rotates on its axis, and it revolves around the Sun, just as all the other planets do.
That depends on which solar system and planet you are asking about - we now know for planets orbiting other stars.
What do you mean by how long would it take? Like how long would it take to orbit around the sun?
Depends on distance Earth takes one year The two closer planets (Mercury and Venus) take less than a year The other planets take more than a year
The outer planets take longer.
Very long.
There are billions of planets in the galaxy. Most of them have no names and have not been observed yet.As of 1 September 2017, there have been confirmed detections of 3,660 exoplanets in 2,744 planetary systems and 614 multiple planetary systems.
Voyager took 9 years using a favourable positioning of other planets on the way there.
Saturn orbits the Sun like the other planets, it does not orbit anything else. One orbit for Saturn takes 29.4571 Earth years.
revolution
noones quite sure yet about if there is life on other planets because there is just no scientific proof of that yet. It would take to long to trave to other planets outside of our solar system because they can be light years away. However when we develope a way to reach the speed of light im sure we'll find out
Mars does not rotate around the Earth. It rotates around the Sun, just like all the other planets/
Mars does not rotate around the Earth. It rotates on its axis, and it revolves around the Sun, just as all the other planets do.