(The year is proportional to the distance to the power 1.5) In our solar system, Mercury has the shortest year. Neptune has the longest.
Mercury is the shortest and Neptune is the longest
The order of the planets by longest year is the normal order (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). The farther away a planet's orbit is from the Sun, the longer the year.
To arrange time divisions from longest to shortest, the correct order is: year, month, week, day, hour, minute, second. A year encompasses the longest duration, followed by a month, then a week, and so on, with a second being the shortest measurement in this sequence.
Mercury
(The year is proportional to the distance to the power 1.5) In our solar system, Mercury has the shortest year. Neptune has the longest.
Neptune has the longest year( Pluto would be but it isn't a planet) Mercury has the shortest year(1 year=88 earth days)
Mercury is the shortest and Neptune is the longest
What inner planet has the shortest year
the longest
Pluto has the longest year, if it was still a planet that is, equal to 248.76 Earth years. Since Pluto is no longer considered a planet, the planet with the longest year is Neptune, at 164.8 Earth years per revolution around the Sun.
Yes. Longest day of the year in one hemisphere, and shortest day of the year in the other hemisphere. So our summer solstice on June 21 is the longest day in Europe or America, but the shortest day for the Australians.
Longest - Winter Solstice - December 21 Shortest - Summer Solstice - June 21
No, the shortest.
The're the longest and shortest days of the year!
seasons
Mercury has the shortest year. It's year is about 88 Earth days.