If you could travel at the speed of light, the trip from Mars to the Sun would take you about 12-15 minutes - and that's assuming you start off immediately at light-speed.
Mars is approxy 205 million KM away from the sun. Divide that into light hours(Traveling @ - Speed of Light (I) for --- hrs., mins., secs., yrs., etc.)
Now, the average light second can travel up to 1km per 0.005 of a second.
Transfer that and go into the decameter and you will find that
it is approxy 2441.5 hrs to get to the sun from Mars.
It takes Mars approximately 1.88 Earth years to orbit the sun once. This is equal to about 17,569 hours.
A day on Mars is about 24.6 hours. A year on Mars takes 687 Earth days.It takes Mars this long to orbit the sun.
There are 16,523 hours and 26 minuets in one Mars year.
Mars will revole around the sun forever until it blows up or the sun has a supernova
None, you surely mean moons, right? There is only one sun, and that is the one Mars orbits.
50 hours
1.800
687 days, multiply by 24 to put it into hours.
it takes about 6 months earth time for mars to rotate around the sun
It takes Mars approximately 1.88 Earth years to orbit the sun once. This is equal to about 17,569 hours.
It takes Mars approximately 687 Earth days to orbit the sun once. This is equivalent to about 16,494 hours.
Mars is about 12 light-minutes away from the Sun. Mars is the fourth planet from the sun in the Solar System.
A day on Mars is about 24.6 hours. A year on Mars takes 687 Earth days.It takes Mars this long to orbit the sun.
Mars is 227,936,640 km (141,633,263 miles) from the sun on average.
It takes Mars approximately 687 Earth days to orbit the Sun one time.
There are 16,523 hours and 26 minuets in one Mars year.
Mars will revole around the sun forever until it blows up or the sun has a supernova