There is no planet which fits that description.
Saturn has a slower orbital speed than Jupiter. Saturn's average orbital speed is about 9.69 km/s, while Jupiter's average orbital speed is about 13.07 km/s, making Jupiter about 3.38 km/s faster than Saturn.
Just a bit slower. It's rotation period is 24 hours and 37 minutes. Just imagine, if you lived on Mars, you could sleep in an extra half hour, and still have an extra seven minutes to get ready for work!
Jupiter will be traveling most slowly around the Sun when it is farthest from the Sun in its orbit. This is because Kepler's second law states that a planet will move faster when it is closer to the Sun and slower when it is farther away.
The poles of Jupiter rotate faster the the equator because of a bulge there caused by gases (which aren't as solidy held together as rocky planets). Since the Great Red Spot is closer to the poles, it spins slower than the equator.
It depends on the planet. The planets orbiting closer to the sun than earth (Mercury and Venus) have shorter years, because they have smaller orbits, and travel faster. The planets further from the sun (Mars, Jupier, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) have longer years because they have larger orbits and travel slower.
The length of the planet's year would be affected.
Saturn has a slower orbital speed than Jupiter. Saturn's average orbital speed is about 9.69 km/s, while Jupiter's average orbital speed is about 13.07 km/s, making Jupiter about 3.38 km/s faster than Saturn.
A moon orbits around a planet, while a planet orbits around a star. Moons tend to have faster and smaller orbits compared to planets, which follow larger and slower orbits around the star. Additionally, moons' orbits are influenced by the gravitational pull of their host planet, whereas planets are not typically influenced by other celestial bodies in the same way.
You can't run on Jupiter, it doesn't have a solid surface for you to run on.
Saturn is slower because it is farther from the sun. The farther away a planet is from the sun, the slower its orbital speed.
Relative to the sun, it Mercury. It orbits at a speed of 47.9 km per second, faster than any other planet. this is due to its closeness to the sun, the orbital speed of the planets get slower as we move away.
yes it does
Neptune moves more slowly than Earth. The farther a planet is from the Sun, the longer its orbit. But the lesser gravity of the Sun at longer distances means that the planets also do not need to move as rapidly in their orbits. A planet farther from the Sun moves more slowly than one closer to the Sun.
Since the gravitational effect of the Sun decreases with distance from it, the planets farther from the Sun do not have to move as rapidly to remain in orbit. (In fact, the speed is what establishes the orbit, not the other way around.) So the outer planets, in addition to having much farther to travel in their orbits, are also moving more slowly. This combination means that outer planets take very much longer to orbit the Sun than do the inner planets such as Earth. By comparison, the length of time it takes (in Earth years) for each of the outer planets to make one complete revolution around the Sun: Jupiter - 11.9 Earth years Saturn - 29.5 Earth years Uranus - 84 Earth years Neptune - 165 Earth years
The curved path of a planet around the sun is called an orbit. Orbits are elliptical in shape, with the sun located at one of the foci of the ellipse. The gravitational pull of the sun keeps the planet in its orbit as it travels around the sun.
Just a bit slower. It's rotation period is 24 hours and 37 minutes. Just imagine, if you lived on Mars, you could sleep in an extra half hour, and still have an extra seven minutes to get ready for work!
Jupiter will be traveling most slowly around the Sun when it is farthest from the Sun in its orbit. This is because Kepler's second law states that a planet will move faster when it is closer to the Sun and slower when it is farther away.