About 27 days
Since the sun is not solid, it rotates at different rates at different latitudes. One rotation takes 36 days at the poles but only 25 days at the equator.
It takes the sun about 11 years just to rotate.
At the equator, the sun takes 25.38 Earth days to rotate once.
At the poles, it takes 34.3 Earth days to rotate once.
Stars are made of gases and hence tend to rotate faster near their equator than their poles. Typically, Sun takes 25 days to rotate at its axis near its equator.
The sun doesnt rotate luv. The sun stays stationary while us [[Earth]] and the other planets [[that make up our solar system]] rotate around it. =)
The average distance is 57.9 million kilometres.
About 365.25 days.
Just a few seconds.
about 25 days
2400 hours
Because Jupiter is not a solid body it does not rotate at a uniform rate. One rotation takes about 9 hours, 50 minutes near the equator, but about five minutes longer near the poles.
Yes, except that because the sun is gaseous, the time taken at different latitudes is different.
16.68 days
27 days
A point at the Sun's equator takes 25 days to rotate, while points 15° from the Sun's north or south poles take about 34.3 days to complete one spin. This is known as differential rotation and probably is an effect of the gaseous makeup of the sun's outer layers. The Sun's spin, as measured at its equator, is about 7189 km/hr.Because the Earth is orbiting the Sun, from Earth the rotation appears to take about 28 days, which is the average time for sunspots to make a complete spin.Since the Sun is not solid, there's no reason that all of it has to rotate all in onepiece, and the fact is that it doesn't. When we look at the Sun's surface, we seethe equator rotating fastest, and the rotation slowing down as we look fartherfrom the equator and closer to the poles.As the Sun consists of a plasma and is not solid, it rotates faster at its equator than at its poles.This behavior is known as differential rotation, and is caused by convection in the Sun and the movement of mass, due to steep temperature gradients from the core outwards. This mass carries a portion of the Sun's counter-clockwise angular momentum, as viewed from the ecliptic north pole, thus redistributing the angular velocity.The period of this actual rotation is approximately 25.6 days at the equator and 33.5 days at the poles. However, due to our constantly changing vantage point from the Earth as it orbits the Sun, the apparent rotation of the star at its equator is about 28 days.
At the equator: 25 days. Near the poles: 34 days.
The Sun has a differential rotation, caused by Coriolis forces. Near the equator, one rotation takes about 25 days; near the poles, one rotation takes about 34 days.
Because Jupiter is not a solid body it does not rotate at a uniform rate. One rotation takes about 9 hours, 50 minutes near the equator, but about five minutes longer near the poles.
It takes 25 days to rotate at the equator and 36 days to rotate at the poles.
The sun appears to make a complete trip around the equator every 24 hours.
The sun appears to make a complete trip around the equator every 24 hours.
Yes, except that because the sun is gaseous, the time taken at different latitudes is different.
how long does it take for Mercury to rotate on its own axis IN ONE DAY
when diaz
27.3
243 days
hii