Yes, it is spinning quite fast. Going round in five minutes under 10 hours is very fast for something with ten times the diameter of the Earth. It is not fast enough to make it break up, though.
the speed of a comet and the rotation is far too fast for a spacecraft to land
The Earth rotates at a rate of slightly over 15 arc-seconds per second.The actual speed of rotation depends on latitude. It's greatest at the equator. At the equator, the Earth's rotation speed is about 465 meters per second.
The speed of rotation is greatest at the equator; 1038 miles per hour.
Earth's rotation speed is gradually decreasing, as a result of the tides.
Fast.
12345 km an hour
i think because its go fast
It depends on the make and model of the Hard Drive. Normally the spin speed does control how fast you can access a certain part of a track, but it also depends on how fast your seek time it. If you have poor seek time, your rotation speed doesnt mean anything.
If the Moon's rotation speed were half as fast as it is now, each lunar day would be twice as long. This would affect the Moon's gravitational pull on Earth, leading to changes in tides and potentially impacting ecosystems that rely on tidal rhythms.
No. While Mercury orbits the sun at a very high speed, its rotation is very slow.
because you are moving at the same speed - relatively, you are standing still. you are small, the earth is BIG.
The linear speed of a rotating object depends on its angular speed (how fast it rotates) and the distance from the axis of rotation (the radius). Linear speed is calculated as the product of the angular speed and the radius.
Yes, it is spinning quite fast. Going round in five minutes under 10 hours is very fast for something with ten times the diameter of the Earth. It is not fast enough to make it break up, though.
An anemometer is the tool used to measure wind speed. It consists of cups that rotate in the wind and the speed of rotation is used to calculate the wind speed.
the speed of a comet and the rotation is far too fast for a spacecraft to land
There is no way to "feel speed" by itself. If you feel that a car is going fast, it is because the ride is bumpy, because of an acceleration in a curve, or because you see the landscape go by quickly. None of these apply in the case of Earth's rotation. In fact, there is no way to measure it - and hence, there is no way to define "absolute speed". Speed must always be specified relative to some object.