81.96 days
Mercury orbits the Sun in about 88 Earth days. So, in 1060 days......You do the math.
It takes Earth 365 and 1/4 days to complete an orbit.
The Earth makes a complete orbit of the Sun every 365.256 days.
A year on Mercury lasts about 88 Earth days. This is because Mercury orbits the Sun at a faster rate due to its close proximity to the Sun.
The time it takes to complete one orbit varies depending on the object and its orbital path. For example, the International Space Station orbits Earth approximately every 90 minutes, while Mars takes about 687 Earth days to complete one orbit around the Sun.
Mercury orbits the Sun in about 88 Earth days. So, in 1060 days......You do the math.
29.53 days The Moon orbits the Earth once every 27.32 days, but it orbits in the same direction as the Earth turns (counter-clockwise seen from the north pole). The Earth is also changing its position with regard to the Sun. So it takes another 2.21 solar days (Earth spins) to complete the synodic month.
Our moon requires 27.3 days to orbit the earth. No other moon orbits our earth--they orbit other planets.
It orbits the sun once every 87.969 earth days. I hope this helps!
Pluto orbits the Sun in 14,164.4 Pluto days (90,613.305 Earth days, or 248.03 Earth years).
earth takes 365 days to complete it
Mercury orbits the sun every 88 days, the earth orbits the sun every 365 days.Therefore 365/ 88 = 4.14 times
365.25 365 ⅟4
There are many satellites that orbit the earth in a day or less. All of them are man made. The only real satellite that orbits the earth is the moon. That takes 28 days to complete a single orbit.
The ISS orbits the Earth in about 90 minutes. Some satellites are in geostationary orbit, orbiting in exactly one day. The Moon orbits (moves around) the Earth in about 28 days!
It takes 365 days to complete it.
Neptune orbits the sun, not Earth. Its orbital period is 60,182 Earth days, or about 165 Earth years.