Jupiter takes about 12 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun.
An orbit by Uranus takes 30,800 Earth days (84.3 Earth years, each having 365.25 Earth days).However, a "day" on Uranus is only 17.24 hours long, so a Uranus year consists of 42,877 "Uranian days".*Conflicting figures will result from application of non-Julian years for Earth, or the synodic period of Uranus's orbit, which is 369.66 Earth days.
That depends on the distance between Uranus and the orbiting body. The closer a body is to the body that it orbits, the faster the orbital speed. The closest of Uranus' moons, Cordelia, takes a little over 8 hours to orbit Uranus. The farthest moon orbiting Uranus, Ferdinand, takes about 7.7 Earth years to complete one orbit.
88 days
Venus takes about 225 Earth days to complete one revolution around the Sun.
The question doesn't even make sense...
Zero. The orbital period of Mercury is 58 days. The rotational period of Uranus is 0.71833 days.
Uranus is way farther from the Sun than Earth, so it takes longer to revolve around it. Instead of taking about 365 Earth days, which is how long it takes Earth, Uranus takes about30,685 Earth days!You can't have a simple exact answer. For one thing there are slightly different definitions for the "orbital period" of Uranus and the length of an "Earth day".(I've used one of the numbers given by NASA.)
The orbital period of Uranus is 30,799 days or 84.323 Earth years.
There are 365.25 days in the Earth's revolution around the Sun. Hence, leap years. Each planet has its own period of revolution.
Venus' period of revolution around the Sun is 224.7 days.Its period of rotation about its own axis is 243 days, retrograde.
Jupiter takes about 12 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun.
An orbit by Uranus takes 30,800 Earth days (84.3 Earth years, each having 365.25 Earth days).However, a "day" on Uranus is only 17.24 hours long, so a Uranus year consists of 42,877 "Uranian days".*Conflicting figures will result from application of non-Julian years for Earth, or the synodic period of Uranus's orbit, which is 369.66 Earth days.
160 days
gh
Uranus takes 84.016846 years to orbit the sun which is: 84.016846x365.26=30,688 days
30,799 days