Venus
The inner, or Terrestrial planets are very small in comparison to the outer, or Jovian planets. The smallest Jovian planet, Uranus, is 14.5 times larger than the largest Terrestrial planet, Earth.
Neptune's year is about 164 Earth years long.
Mercury has a year that is shorter than its day. It takes Mercury about 88 Earth days to orbit the Sun, but it rotates on its axis so slowly that its day is much longer, lasting about 176 Earth days.
No, a planet's day cannot be longer than its year. A day is defined as the time it takes for a planet to complete one full rotation on its axis, while a year is the time it takes for the planet to complete one orbit around its star. A planet's year is always longer than its day.
Shorter. Mercury has a shorter orbit than earth and 1 day in mercury = 59 days on Earth. 1 year on mercury= 88 days on earth.
hmmm i dont know
2
The outer planets all rotate faster than the inner planets. Each of them has a rotational period shorter than an Earth day. All of the inner planets have rotational periods longer than one Earth day. The outer planets are mostly made up of hydrogen, helim, and ice, and they are much larger than the inner planets which are mostly iron and various types of rock.
venus
It isn't
The inner, or Terrestrial planets are very small in comparison to the outer, or Jovian planets. The smallest Jovian planet, Uranus, is 14.5 times larger than the largest Terrestrial planet, Earth.
yes when its on other planets ,it can be.
The two planets that have the same length of and Earth day but shorter than a Earth day are Neptune and Uranus because a Earth day on Neptune is 18 hours and 30 minuets Earth time, And Uranus is 17.24 hours. Thus Neptune and Uranus is closest to an Earth day being below 23 hours and 56 min (24 hours rounding).
You deal with it because a day is a lot shorter than a month or a year.
Neptune's year is about 164 Earth years long.
it rotates VERY slowly
Saturn has the second (to Jupiter) fastest spin of the eight planets. It takes about 10 hours and 14 minutes to make one full rotation on its axis, much shorter than an Earth day of 24 hours.