Jupiter has an equatorial rotation velocity of 12.6 m/sec or 45,300 km/hr (28,150 mph). This provides a Jovian "day" of 9.925 earth hours
Jupiter takes about 9 hours 56 minutes to do one full rotation, compared to 24 hours here on Earth which means it is travelling at 12.6 km/s.
The giant gas planet rotates about every 10 hours. That is a rated speed of about 47,000 kilometers per hour. By comparison, the earth rotates at about 1,600 kilometers per hour.
Jupiter fully rotates every 9 hrs. 56 mins.
The violent storms on Jupiter make it finish rotating once on it's axis in less than ten hours.
it takes 9.8 hours
Jupiter rotates on its axis most rapidly out of all eight of the planets, 9h 55m 30s for one full spin.
yes
A day.
Yes it does. The tilt is so large that the planet's rotational axis is roughly in the plane of its orbit.
Jupiter's equatorial diameter is 88,780 miles, from which you can calculate its circumference. Its equatorial sidereal day is 9 hours 50 min 30 sec, so circumference divided by this will give your answer in miles per hour.
Junipers typically do not spin at all; their roots keep them firmly anchored to the Earth. The planet Jupiter, on the other hand, spins once in just 9.8 hours!
It takes approximately 10 hours for jupiter to spin on its axis
About 0.42 Earth days.
10 hours. Or two and a fraction per Earth day.
Yes. Europa is tidally locked to Jupiter, meaning it completes one rotation every orbit. As a result, one side always faces Jupiter.
You get more aligned with your axis as you sit.
There is no such bowling style as 'fast in spin' or 'fast out spin in'.
All planets do. The difference is that for gas giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune), the speed of the "surface spin" is often quite different from the rotation of the atmosphere, which will vary by latitude.
Jupiter takes about 9 hours 55 minutes to spin once on it's axis which makes it the fastest rotation. Mercury is the fastest spinning planet.
Jupiter rotates on its axis most rapidly out of all eight of the planets, 9h 55m 30s for one full spin.
No! it has a straight axis?
The Great red Spot which is a anti-cyclonic hurricane much like ones on earth but much stronger and spin at a different axis