The sun completes a full orbit around the center of the Milky Way galaxy approximately every 200 million years. This movement is part of the sun's journey through the galaxy, affecting its position relative to other stars and celestial bodies.
248 earth years to orbit the sun
It doesn't! It changes every 200 000 years, interestingly the sun does a polar flip every Solar max, which is every 11 years. Try google search 'South Atlantic Anomaly' the magnetic field is already turning there.
Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.Yes. It takes a long, long time for one turn, like 200 million years.
Jupiter orbits the Sun every 11.86 Earth years (or 4,332 days). The longer orbital period for Jupiter is because it orbits at an average distance of 778 million km(Earth orbits at an average of 150 million km).
There are more seconds in a million years than inches from the sun to the Earth. There are about 31.5 million seconds in a year, so there are approximately 31.5 billion seconds in a million years. The average distance from the sun to the Earth is about 93 million miles, which is equivalent to roughly 5.5 trillion inches.
It completes an entire revolution.
The Sun orbits the center of the galaxy roughly every 200 million years
About once every 200-225 million years. The fancy shmancy term for this is "Cosmic Year".
Due to the abnormal amount of rust and radioactive materials on the planet Mars, some people suggest that there was a second sun in the solar system orbiting in the asteroid belt about 200 million years ago
It could take over 200 million years to do so.
200 million years.
Somewhere between 200 and 250 million years.
According to Monty Python, 200 million years.... That's quite sensible for Monty Python. The real answer is about 225 million years.
Long-period comet
It takes about 200 million years for our solar system to revolve around the center of our Milky Way. It takes the earth 365.242 days to circle the sun. The .242 days are accumulated and added on every 4 years with a 'leap year.' Since that will accumulate to less than 1 day eventually, we skip the extra day (leap year) every century, unless that century is divisible by 400
The sun was roughly 4.6 billion years old a million years ago. The margin for error on the estimated age of the sun is more than a million years.
Saturn has been orbiting the Sun continually for the past 5 billion years or so. It takes about 29.4 years to do so, so it has done it about 200 million times.