No. The moon rotates once for every orbit it makes around Earth.
No, only once. Exactly.
Actually I dont know, but I guess the rate of everything happeningnow would be twice as fast.
Mars takes longer to rotate around the sun than Earth. Since it takes Mars almost twice as long as earth to make a rotation around the sun, you are half your age. Less rotations, less years
A Martian day is only 40 minutes longer than an Earth day, but its year is almost twice as long as ours.
It takes mars twice as long to make a full revolution around the sun than it takes earth.
Clicking "Rotate Right" on the Drawing toolbar typically rotates an image by 15 degrees each time. Therefore, if you click it twice, the image will rotate a total of 30 degrees to the right.
Mercury takes 88 Earth days to go around the Sun, but strangely, its day is twice as long taking 176 Earth days to rotate just once! Mercury's slow spin is evidence of why the planet has a magnetic field just 1% as strong as Earth's. (This may have been a very long answer)
No, it orbits the earth once every 27.5 days or so.
Saturn has a period of revolution that is approximately twice as long as Earth's. While Earth takes about 365 days to complete one revolution around the Sun, Saturn takes roughly 29.5 Earth years to complete its orbit.
Actually, the answer is Mars. Mars' revolution is 1.88 years which is almost twice as the revolution of Earth.
All the veins in your body can stretch twice around the earth.
720 degreees