Mercury: A little less than 88 days.
Venus: Almost 225 days.
Earth: Exactly 365.256363004 days.
Mars: Almost 687 days.
Jupiter: A little less that 4,333 days.
Saturn: Exactly 29.4571 years.
Uranus: Almost 84.323 years.
Neptune: Exactly 164.79 years.
Curious note:
Since Neptune was discovered, in 1846, it has not yet completed one single full orbit around the Sun.
In other words, since its discovery, for Neptune not ONE local year has passed by...
No planet (in our solar system) has a year of 264 earth days. The two planets near to the sun than us have short years, all others have longer years.
Earth and Mars. Earth's day is 24 hours, while Mars' day is 24 hours 37 minutes.
The length of each planet's orbit varies significantly due to their distances from the Sun. For example, Mercury takes about 88 Earth days to complete its orbit, while Venus takes about 225 Earth days. Earth itself takes 365.25 days, and Mars orbits the Sun in approximately 687 Earth days. Outer planets, like Jupiter and Saturn, have much longer orbital periods, with Jupiter taking about 11.9 years and Saturn about 29.5 years.
9 earth days
The length of a planet's orbit around the Sun varies depending on the distance from the Sun. For example, Mercury has an orbit of about 88 Earth days, while Neptune's orbit is around 165 Earth years.
No planet (in our solar system) has a year of 264 earth days. The two planets near to the sun than us have short years, all others have longer years.
A year on a planet is the time it takes for that planet to complete one orbit around the sun. For example, on Earth, a year is about 365 days. The length of a year varies for each of the eight planets in our solar system based on their distance from the sun and their orbital speed.
One full rotation of any planet on its axis is the length of that planets day, Earth included.
Earth and Mars. Earth's day is 24 hours, while Mars' day is 24 hours 37 minutes.
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
The length of each planet's orbit varies significantly due to their distances from the Sun. For example, Mercury takes about 88 Earth days to complete its orbit, while Venus takes about 225 Earth days. Earth itself takes 365.25 days, and Mars orbits the Sun in approximately 687 Earth days. Outer planets, like Jupiter and Saturn, have much longer orbital periods, with Jupiter taking about 11.9 years and Saturn about 29.5 years.
No two planets in our solar system have the same length of day or length of year. Compared with Earth, these planets have longer years: Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. These have much longer days than Earth: Mercury and Venus. Mars has a day that's slightly longer than Earth's day. Depending on the particular definition of "day" that is used, two planets have a day that's longer than than that planet's year. They are Mercury (solar day) and Venus (sidereal day).
9 earth days
Each planets has a different length of time it takes to make a full rotation. The approximate lengths are: Mercury: 58 days, Venus: 243 days, Earth: 24 hours, Mars: 24 hours, Jupiter: 10 hours, Saturn: 11 hours, Uranus: 17 hours and Neptune: 16 hours.
The length of a year for each planet increases as each planet is farther from the Sun. The lengths are: Mercury: 88 days, Venus: 225 days, Earth: 365 days, Mars: 687 days, Jupiter: 12 years, Saturn: 30 years, Uranus: 84 years and Neptune: 165 years.
The earth day is Approximately 24 hours in Length.
The length of a planet's orbit around the Sun varies depending on the distance from the Sun. For example, Mercury has an orbit of about 88 Earth days, while Neptune's orbit is around 165 Earth years.