it is 10 hours for 1 day and just like earth has 24 hours in 1 day but for 1 year there they have 2549664532127423142814238263 days in 1 year but instead od 1 year there 1 year there is 11.86 years for 1 year!
It takes jupiter about 9 hours and 56 minutes to rotate on its axis. (The orbital period, or time taken to orbit the sun, is about 11.9 years).
The rotation time of Jupiter is 9.84 Earth hours.
Saturn rotates once every 10 hours and 39 minutes.
Jupiter rotates once in a little less than 10 hours.
It takes 4332 Earth days for Jupiter to orbit the Sun
The polar rotational period of Jupiter is 9 hours, 55 minutes, 40.6 seconds. The equatorial rotational period is 9 hours, 50 minutes, 30 seconds.
Jupiter does have day and night due to the rotation of its axis. Jupiter turns on its axis every 9.84 hours and spins much faster than most of the planets.
No. Not even all planets rotate in the same direction (Venus is retrograde; Uranus is sideways); the rotation of (much smaller) comets is essentially random.
It very much depends which planet you mean, as it depends on dozens of factors! Referring to Earth, it takes one day (24 hours) to rotate once around it's own axis.
it's much colder on jupiter.
it take 10 hours and 14 minutes to rotate on its axis
The polar rotational period of Jupiter is 9 hours, 55 minutes, 40.6 seconds. The equatorial rotational period is 9 hours, 50 minutes, 30 seconds.
59 days
Once a day throughout its history.
53 hours with 56 minutes
53 hours with 56 minutes
It would take a day (24 hours).
3.12 degrees - not much compared with most other planets.
360 degrees per 24 hours.
Jupiter does have day and night due to the rotation of its axis. Jupiter turns on its axis every 9.84 hours and spins much faster than most of the planets.
Mercury's period of rotation would take about 59 earth days
88 days to revolve and to rotate on its axis 56.8 days