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  1. Nov 8, 2024 · The Short Answer: Here is how long it takes each of the planets in our solar system to orbit around the Sun (in Earth days): Mercury: 88 days. Venus: 225 days. Earth: 365 days. Mars: 687 days. Jupiter: 4,333 days. Saturn: 10,759 days. Uranus: 30,687 days.

    • Orbital Period
    • Sidereal vs. Solar Day
    • Variations
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Venus orbits the Sun at an average distance of about 0.72 AU (108,000,000 km/67,000,000 mi) with almost no eccentricity. In fact, with its farthest orbit (aphelion) of 0.728 AU (108,939,000 km) and closest orbit (perihelion) of 0.718 AU (107,477,000 km), it has the most circular orbit of any planet in the Solar System. The planet’s orbital period i...

    While a year on Venus lasts the equivalent of 224.65 Earth days, it only lasts the equivalent 1.92 days on Venus. This is due to the fact that Venus rotates quick slowly and in the opposite direction of its orbit. Because of this, a Solar Day – the time it takes for the Sun to rise, set, and return to the same place in the sky – takes 116.75 Earth ...

    Because of its dense atmosphere and its highly circular rotation, Venus experiences very little in the way of temperature variations during the course of a year. Similarly, its axial tilt of 2.64° (compared to Earth’s 23.44°) is the second-lowest in the Solar System, behind Mercury’s extremely low tilt of 0.03. This means that there is virtually no...

    A year on Venus is 224.65 days, but a day on Venus is 116.75 days. Learn how Venus' orbit, rotation, and atmosphere affect its climate and seasons.

  2. Nov 8, 2024 · It takes 225 Earth days for Venus to go all the way around the Sun. That means that a day on Venus is a little longer than a year on Venus. Since the day and year lengths are similar, one day on Venus is not like a day on Earth. Here, the Sun rises and sets once each day.

    • Rotation and revolution. Years on other planets are measured using Earth’s tropical year, which lasts about 365 solar days; one solar day is the time it takes our planet to spin, or rotate, once fully on its axis, as measured by the Sun’s position over a given point.
    • Laws of motion. Kepler’s third law of motion explains that the time it takes a planet to complete a revolution is related to its distance from our star.
    • Mercury. Mercury spins on its axis very slowly and completes one rotation every 59 Earth days. However, its orbit around the Sun is speedy compared to other planets.
    • Venus. The hottest planet in the solar system takes about 225 Earth days to complete one rotation around the Sun. Venus spins very slowly and appears to rotate retrograde, or in a clockwise direction – opposite from most planets, which rotate counterclockwise, or prograde, in the same direction as they move through their orbits.
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  4. For one thing, your “day” would be 243 Earth days long – longer even than a Venus year (one trip around the Sun), which takes only 225 Earth days. For another, because of the planet's extremely slow rotation, sunrise to sunset would take 117 Earth days.

  5. Jun 18, 2014 · The precise amount of time in Earth days it takes for each planet to complete its orbit can be seen below. Mercury: 87.97 days (0.2 years) Venus : 224.70 days (0.6 years) Earth: 365.26 days (1 year) Mars: 686.98 days (1.9 years) Jupiter: 4,332.82 days (11.9 years)

  6. Venus rotates very slowly on its axis – one day on Venus lasts 243 Earth days. The planet orbits the Sun faster than Earth, however, so one year on Venus takes only about 225 Earth days, making a Venusian day longer than its year!

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