It takes Mercury 1407.6 Earth hours to make one full rotation around its axis. To find the number of days on Mercury that equals 7 on Earth, you would have to first convert this value to days:
1407.6 hours = 58.65 days
So, if 58.65 days on Earth = 1 day on Mercury, where the variable x represents the number of days on Mercury that equals 7 on Earth, then:
1/x=58.65/7
1/x=8.38
x= 0.119 days.
Thus: For every 7 earth days, there is 0.119 Mercury days.
Mercury has an orbital period of 87.969 days. This means that it will take about 88 days here on Earth for Mercury to travel around the Sun once. Since a year is 365.25 days long, it only take 0.24 years for Mercury to revolve around the Sun.
The gravity on Mercury is about 38% of Earth's gravity, which means that objects weigh less on Mercury compared to Earth. This is due to Mercury's smaller size and mass compared to Earth.
This varies on what climate is being discussed here. If there is climate on Mercury that is similar to that of Earth, temperatures would arise.
The weight of an object that is 100 pounds on Earth would be approximately 38 pounds on Mercury. This is because Mercury's gravity is about 38% that of Earth's, so the object would weigh less on Mercury.
The postal system is confined to operate only on Earth. A less humorous answer: Write down all the names of the planets and look for the answer there. To make it really easy, here are those names: Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune.
On Mercury, one day there is equal to 58.65 days here.
If someone could live on Mercury and still used an Earth clock, they would be the same age, 13 Earth years.However, if you lived there and had measured your age as 13 Mercury years, you would be just 3 Earth years old. Mercury's year, the time it takes to go around the Sun, is only about 88 days. So 13 Mercury years would be 13 x 88 or just 1144 Earth days (3.13 Earth years). Mercury completes an orbit 4 times while Earth is making just one.Conversely, if you moved to Mercury and wanted to express your age here (13 Earth years) in Mercury years, you would say that you were almost 54 Mercury years old (You are 4745 Earth days old, which is 53.9 Mercury years).
Mercury has an orbital period of 87.969 days. This means that it will take about 88 days here on Earth for Mercury to travel around the Sun once. Since a year is 365.25 days long, it only take 0.24 years for Mercury to revolve around the Sun.
Mercury is more hotter than earth. People can't able to survive here.
The gravity on Mercury is about 38% of Earth's gravity, which means that objects weigh less on Mercury compared to Earth. This is due to Mercury's smaller size and mass compared to Earth.
No. Different planets have different speeds of rotation and different lengths of year. As a result, they experience a different number of days. Here are the number of days in each planet's year with earth days in parentheses Mercury: 0.5 days (88 Earth days) Venus: 1.92 (243 Earth days) Earth: 365.25 Mars: 668.6 (687 Earth days) Jupiter: 10,476 (4,333 Earth days) Saturn: 24,491 (10,759 Earth days) Uranus: 42,718 (30,799 Earth days) Neptune: 89,666 (60,190 Earth days)
Here are the orbital periods of all eight planets in days. Mercury = 87.9691 Venus = 224.70069 Earth = 365.256363 Mars = 686.971 Jupiter = 4331.572 Saturn = 10759.22 Uranus = 30799.095 Neptune = 60190
365 days
Time passes at almost exactly the same rate on every planet in our solar system (I say almost exactly because heavier planets do experience some very small amount of Einsteinian time dilation which slows down time). So, if you are 14 here, you are also 14 on Mercury. ---Mercury's orbital period is about 88 days (Earth days, that is), so you can multiply your age by 365 and divide by 88 to come up with the number of "Mercury years."
Mercury . . . 88 earth daysVenus . . . 225 daysEarth . . . 365 daysMars . . . 685 daysJupiter . . . 12 earth yearsSaturn . . . 29 yearsUranus . . . 84 yearsNeptune . . . 165 yearsPluto . . .Expelled from the lofty fraternity and demoted to "dwarf planet".Orbital period = roughly 248 earth years.Has covered only about 1/3 of its orbit since it was discovered in 1930.Mercury - 0.2408467 yearsVenus - 0.61519726 yearsEarth - 1.0000174 yearsMars - 1.8808476 yearsJupiter - 11.862615 yearsSaturn - 29.447498 yearsUranus - 84.016846 yearsNeptune - 164.79132 years
It doesn't make sense to talk about a "Mercury month". Here on Earth, the month is defined by the Moon's revolution around Earth. At least, that's what the term "month" meant originally. There is no equivalent on Mercury, which has no moons. Of course, you could use any arbitrary time period and call it a "month", but there is no generally agreed-upon "month" for other planets, whether they have moons or not.
Oh, dude, each planet has a different period of revolution around the sun. Like, Mercury takes about 88 Earth days to complete one revolution, while Neptune takes a whopping 165 Earth years. So, yeah, it's like a cosmic race out there, man.