Here are the planets where time runs differently:

  • Earth

The Earth is a special planet with its own unique set of rules. It is the only planet with permanent day-night cycles, for example, and one of only two planets with a geomagnetic field as strong as Earth's. It also makes one complete rotation around the Sun every 365 days, and it is the only planet that can be seen from both sides.

  • Edmunds' Planet

Edmund's Planet is a planet in the universe of Atlas, where time runs differently. This is due to the planet's history being said to be the same as ours, but according to a different calendar, where years there are only 24-hrs long, and the day lasts 360-days. This causes huge rifts in the daily lives of humans, as the years there are only 8-hours long. This means that every day is a new day for them and can't really be considered as the same day over and over. They learn not to make many plans, as they feel as if they will never be able to complete them, so they make the best of what they have and live the day to the fullest.

  • Gargantua

Gargantua is a planet that is located in the Gargantua system. This is a catalog of the planets in that system. It features a planet's name, star, and a few facts about that planet. The planet Gargantua is a gas giant with two moons. The main moon is a bit smaller than the Earth, and it's rocky, with a large carbonate core and a thin mantle, so it has a geologically active crust. There are no moons in Gargantua's syzygy, so it's tidally locked. Each planet has a different way of counting years. The Gargantua years is 6,880 days. This is because each planet measures time differently since their revolution around their common stars is different. A gargantuan is anything that is huge. So, a gargantuan hour is a day that is one thousand hours long (24 hours x 60 minutes per hour). All the rest of the hours on this planet run more reasonably.

  • Cooper Station

Cooper Station, a planet in the Andromeda galaxy, is a remarkably normal star. It's a small, yellow star, roughly the same size, and mass as our Sun, and it's located within the same solar neighborhood as our Solar System. In Cooper Station, the only way to tell time is to keep track of the day. A single night will last a day, and a single day can, in theory, last a year. It's a system that, though bizarre, is surprisingly practical. Considering the time of day as a variable allows for humans to have a plan for the day, weekly, monthly, and year-long. It also makes time travel possible—though not easy. If time is running at the same pace in Cooper Station as anywhere else in the universe, then traveling to any other time period would be impossible.

  • Dr. Mann's Planet

In a whole galaxy where the seasons are always the same, and everyone goes about their daily lives with no problems, there is one planet that never changes, even though the rest of the planet is constantly moving. This planet is the planet of Mann. 

The planet Mann has a unique time system. The hour is only 1 hour long, and the day is only 3 hours long. You can only do things around the hour and day. If you're with a friend and you both want to go to the same place at the same time, you can't go to both places at the same time.

So, what do you think of this? Share your thoughts with us.