It depends what you mean by "day".
Venus rotates in about 243 Earth days. This is called a sidereal day.
So that's about 243 x 24 Earth hours.
However the "solar day" on Venus is about 117 Earth days.
So that's about 117 x 24 Earth hours.
The solar day is 24 hours on Earth. It's how long the Sun takes
to complete one journey through the sky from noon till noon.
The Earth's rotation period is only about 4 minutes different from
the solar day.
A day on Venus lasts 243 Earth days. Long time...
224.7 Earth Day
There are 88 days in a venus year. That mens if you go to venus for a year and you are 12 when you leave you willl be 16 when you come back. Can you figure it out?
1 day on Venus is as long as one year on Earth. No seriously, that is true, it takes about one year for venus to make a complete rotation (i dont mean revolution, but rotation like spinning a basket ball.) Actually Venus rotates in about 243 Earth days and that's only about 8 months, not a year. One day on Venus is about 243 Earth days long. There are 24 hours in a day on Earth, 243 x 24=5832 hours. That's the rotation period, known as the "sidereal day". But it's more complicated than that because you're ignoring the "solar day". The solar day depends on a planet's motion round the Sun as well as its spin. For Venus the solar day is about 116.75 Earth days. That's about 116.75 x 24 = 2802 hours.
yes it is because it is closer to the sun but it day is actually 243 earth days and so its day is longer than its year.
A day on Venus lasts 243 Earth days. Long time...
117 earth days is equal to 1 Venus day. (including night time.) Mercury's day is the equivalent to 176 earth days.
one day on venus is 59 earth-days long
is your mean
Solar day (24 hours for the Earth): about 116.75 Earth days. Sidereal day (rotation period, about 23 hours and 56 minutes for the Earth): about 243 Earth days. Year: about 224.7 Earth days.
Venus or Mercury, depending on the definition of "day" used. It takes Venus 243 Earth days to spin on its axis relative to the background stars (a "sidereal day"). It takes Venus 224.7 Earth days to orbit the Sun (its year). However, a "solar day" is only 116.75 Earth days long due to the combination of rotation time, orbit time and spin direction. (Venus spins in the other direction to Earth and most other planets.)Mercury has a "sidereal day" of about 58.6 Earth days and a year of about 88 Earth days.
This question is meaningless. An Earth day would be the same length no matter what planet you are on. An Earth day would be the equivalent of 0.004 Venus days and about the same number of Venus year (it takes a whole year for Venus to go round its orbit). A Venus day is 243 Earth days. That's 243 Earth days to rotate once. Astronomers call this a sidereal day. However there is also the solar day of 117 Earth days.
224.7 Earth Day
The Earth rotates in about 23 hours and 56 minutes. That's called the "sidereal day". The sidereal day on Venus is about 243 Earth days. As a year on Venus is only about 224.7 Earth days, this makes Venus' day longer than its year. Venus is the only planet in our Solar System to have this feature.
Venus takes 243.0 earth hours a day.
There are 88 days in a venus year. That mens if you go to venus for a year and you are 12 when you leave you willl be 16 when you come back. Can you figure it out?
Yes and no. There are 2 main definitions of a "day". A "sidereal day" (rotation period) on Venus is 243 Earth days long. However the "solar day" is only about 117 Earth days.