The month is related to the revolution motion of the Moon.
The movement of the Earth in a month is actually a small portion of its orbit around the sun. One month on Earth is 1/12 of the Earth's orbit around the sun.
The so-called "day" of 24 hours is based on a combination of the Earth's axialrotation and orbital revolution.The axial rotation alone is completed in roughly 4 minutes less than 24 hours.One day
One month on Mars, defined as the time it takes for Mars to complete one full orbit around the Sun, is approximately 687 Earth days. Thus, a Martian month would be about 22 Earth days long, assuming a month is roughly one-twelfth of a Martian year. However, since Mars has different rotational dynamics, a "month" in terms of days can vary, but it doesn't have an official month system like Earth.
A month on Earth is based on the amount of time it takes for the moon to make an orbit. Uranus has at least 27 moons, each with a different orbit time, so a month on Uranus doesn't make much sense.
Mercury takes about 88 Earth days, or roughly 3 Earth months, to complete one orbit around the Sun.
Our moon takes a month to orbit the Earth.
Roughly 365.25 days (it changes a little every year) -- One year is one orbit.
The movement of the Earth in a month is actually a small portion of its orbit around the sun. One month on Earth is 1/12 of the Earth's orbit around the sun.
The so-called "day" of 24 hours is based on a combination of the Earth's axialrotation and orbital revolution.The axial rotation alone is completed in roughly 4 minutes less than 24 hours.One day
one full month
One month on Mars, defined as the time it takes for Mars to complete one full orbit around the Sun, is approximately 687 Earth days. Thus, a Martian month would be about 22 Earth days long, assuming a month is roughly one-twelfth of a Martian year. However, since Mars has different rotational dynamics, a "month" in terms of days can vary, but it doesn't have an official month system like Earth.
If I am correct approximately one month.
One "year", roughly 365.25 days.
With a little more than one orbit per month, the Moon wanes at least once each and every month.
The moon takes one month to complete a revolution around the earth. A full moon occurs when the moon is on the opposite side of the earth from the sun (opposition). The full moon can only happen at this part of the lunar orbit, and it takes one month to complete the orbit; thus, full moon happens once a month.
Well, isn't that just a gorgeous question! It takes our lovely Moon around 29.5 days to orbit the Earth completely. In terms of weeks, that's around 4 weeks and 1 day. A month is pretty close to how long it takes for the Moon to orbit too. And a full year is a jumble of around 12 lunar cycles. Patience is a virtue, my friend, just like the Moon takes its sweet time circling our home planet with grace.
It really does not, but it is close to a month. The moon always faces the same way to the earth as it goes around the earth. So the Moon day is the same as its orbit around the Earth, Roughly 29 days.