4 | Motion of the Planets

Motion of the Planets

  • Planets move in two ways:
  • They move in a path around the sun known as an orbit.
  • They rotate on their axis – an imaginary line joining the north and south poles.
  • The time taken for a planet to orbit the sun is known as a year.
  • A year on Earth is approximately 365 days.
  • The further a planet is from the sun, the longer its year. This is due to two factors:
  • The further a planet is from the sun, the larger its orbit.
  • The further a planet is from the sun, the smaller the effect of gravity, meaning the sun has less of a pull on the planet, resulting in a slower orbital speed.
  • The time taken for a planet to rotate on its axis is known as a day.
  • A day on Earth is approximately 24 hours.
  • The rotational speed of a planet is largely determined by the initial rotational speed when the planet was formed. Therefore, the length of a day is unrelated to the size of a planet’s orbit, the orbital speed or the size of a planet.

 
planet earth orbit rotation

Earth takes a day to rotate on its axis and a year to orbit the sun.

(Image: LuckySoul, Adobe Stock)

 

  • The lengths of days and years for the eight major planets are shown in the table below (in Earth hours/days/years).

Planet Day Year
Mercury 1,408 hours (59 days) 88 days
Venus 5,832 hours (243 days) 225 days
Earth 24 hours 365 days
Mars 25 hours 687 days (1.9 years)
Jupiter 10 hours 4,333 days (12 years)
Saturn 11 hours 10,759 days (29 years)
Uranus 17 hours 30,687 days (84 years)
Neptune 16 hours 60,190 days (165 years)

The lengths of days and years on the planets of our solar system