Yes, just about any object in the Solar System - or in space in general - spins. Some faster, some slower.
what makes it spin is the force of gravity in space that keep our planets in place anbd how they move.(the solar system is spining right now.)
The spin (axial rotation) of planets causes day and night.
spin; turn around an imaginary axis of rotation, like the one that includes Earth's geographical north and south poles
A solar system allows a star to exist in a stable condition by taking most of the angular momentum that arose when the star condensed from a random cloud of gas. Without a solar system the average star would spin much too fast and start to fly apart, forming another solar system.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, neptune and Uranus. Not Pluto. 2 years ago it became a dwarf planet and does not count as a planet anymore.
spin fly gravitational spin
what makes it spin is the force of gravity in space that keep our planets in place anbd how they move.(the solar system is spining right now.)
You can make a Solar System Model spin by getting one of the spin things for a baby attach strings with planets on it then boom you have it spinning in no time.
Yes, it spins on an axis 90 degrees to plane of the solar system, different than any other planet.
Yes. Since all planets in the solar system spin on an axis, every planet has cycles of day and night.
Planets,stars and Asteroids, random rocks that roam the world!
Of what? orbit: Mercury spin: Jupiter wind: Neptune
we stay together by gravitational forces and gravital orbitational circles. our solar system was either started by a solar nebula or meteoroids colliding. our solar system was started4,600 years old.
just go to the Google.com and search the "solar system", ok? Carly Mae
The spin of the Earth is residual from the formation of the solar system. The original "whirlpools" of matter started to spin as they orbited the sun due to the Coriolis force acting on them. This caused them to spin around the planets. his spin stayed after the planets firmed up into discrete balls
hi venus and uranus. venus spin very slow and is possibly explained by a collision in the early formation of our solar system. uranis however is up for grabs. its tillted 98 degrees and is basicaly on its side. research it. very interesting. cheers!
They don't. Uranus spins on a "sideways" axis with retrograde spin. Venus also has a retrograde spin. Most spin in the same direction though. This is probably because of how the Solar System was formed, from a spinning disc of material.