According to Wikipedia, the rotational period of the interior of Uranus is 17 hours, 14 minutes. However, as on all giant planets, its upper atmosphere experiences very strong winds in the direction of rotation. At some latitudes, such as about two-thirds of the way from the equator to the south pole, visible features of the atmosphere move much faster, making a full rotation in as little as 14 hours
There are nine 365 day years in 3285 days.
240686 years, 154 days give or take a leap day
There are 1,826 days in five years, which does include the one leap day. Depending on which 5 years there could be 1827 day with two leap years.
25,567 (including an extra day for leap years).
1765 dAyS.....
30769 Earth days, or 84.3 Earth years
Uranus takes around 17.2 hours to rotate once on its axis (a Uranian day) and about 84 Earth years to orbit the Sun (a Uranian year).
84 Earth years.
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.
it has 17 hours in a day
there are zero earth years
17hrs and 14mins
It takes about 84 Earth years. That's about 84 x 365 Earth days.
A full day on Uranus is 17 hours, 14 minutes and 24 seconds ( to be exact.). In other words, a day on Uranus is shorter than a full day on Earth.
It takes 84.01 earth years for Uranus to go around the sun once.
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.)
One year on Uranus is equivalent to about 84 Earth years, due to its longer orbit around the sun. A day on Uranus, however, is shorter than a day on Earth, lasting approximately 17 hours and 14 minutes.