Yes, except that because the sun is gaseous, the time taken at different latitudes is different.
Yes. The Sun rotates every 25.5 days at the equator. Because the Sun is not solid, various regions rotate at different speeds. The polar regions rotate every 36 days, and in-between latitudes spin at in-between speeds.
the sun does not rotate around itself, but the earth takes 365.25 days to make one revolution around the sun.
The Earth does NOT rotate around the Sun. It has an orbital track, on which it takes one year to complete. The Earth moves along that orbital track at approximately 66,000 mph (30 km/sec). The Earth ROTATES on its own axis to give us night and day. This rotation has a speed of 1,000 mph at the Equator, 500 mph at 60 degrees N/S , and you rotate on the spot at the poles. (N/S).
Puto's period of orbital revolution around the sun is 248 earth years.Since its discovery, it has covered a little less than 1/3rd of one complete orbital revolution.
No, you would not be able to define the celestial poles and equator if the Earth did not rotate. Without rotation, there would be no poles, save for possibly magnetic 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.
5 revolutions per 25 seconds =1 revolution per 5 seconds360 degrees per 5 seconds72 degrees per second
rotate it 90 degrees
The earth's circumference at the Equator is 24,902 miles. It makes a complete rotation in 24 hours, so divide the Equator's length by 24. The answer is that, at the Equator, the Earth rotates at 1,037 miles per hour.
Since the Sun is gas, different portions rotate at different rates. The gasses at the equator rotate once in about 25.6 days. At 60-degrees latitude, the gasses rotate in about 30.9 days. Polar regions rotate about once every 36 days. http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/astronomy/sun/rotation.shtml
The planets revolve around the sun. The planets rotate on their own axis.
Yes. The Sun rotates every 25.5 days at the equator. Because the Sun is not solid, various regions rotate at different speeds. The polar regions rotate every 36 days, and in-between latitudes spin at in-between speeds.
the sun does not rotate around itself, but the earth takes 365.25 days to make one revolution around the sun.
South of the equator
It takes the Earth exactly 365 days to fully rotate the sun. Witch is the same amount as a whole year.