Strangely, the Suns has a differential rotation. At the equator, it takes 25 days for one rotation; near the poles, 34 days.
it takes 365 days for the earth to go around the sun once.
The word is "revolve" or "orbit", not "rotate". It takes Eris 560 years to orbit the Sun once.
For the Earth to fully orbit the sun takes 1 year. To fully rotate on it's axis is 23h56m45s. The Sun orbits the Galaxy once every 250 million years and the Sun has differential rotation it takes the poles 32 days to rotate once and the equator 26 days
It takes the sun 25 Earth days to rotate on its axis.
0.345, it takes the sun 27 days to rotate on its axis once.
The Sun has differential rotation meaning that the Sun rotates at the equator once every 25.05 days and at the poles it rotates once every 34.3 days at a velocity of 7.189 x 10^3 km/h
yes the sun moves around the universe but it takes a long time to rotate around it ronly once. the sun might not have made it around the universe once.
It takes 23 hrs 56 min to rotate once relative to a distant object like a star. It takes an extra 4 minutes to rotate once relative to the Sun because we are also in an orbit round the Sun.
It takes 23 hrs 56 min to rotate once relative to a distant object like a star. It takes an extra 4 minutes to rotate once relative to the Sun because we are also in an orbit round the Sun.
It takes Venus about 243 Earth days to rotate once. It takes Venus about 225 Earth days to revolve once around the Sun.
The movement around the Sun is called "revolution", not "rotation". It takes Mercury 88 days for one revolution - almost three months.
687 earth days