Our Sun has one axis of rotation, just like any other object in the Universe. If you refer to axis of symmetry, being more or less a sphere, there would be an infinite number of those.
The Sun rotates on its axis once every 25.05 (Earth) days.
25 days
0.345, it takes the sun 27 days to rotate on its axis once.
1. round the sun. 2. round its own axis.
It rotates.
The earth sots on its axis at 23.5 degrees as it revolvees around the sun.
On its axis Earth rotates around the sun.
Yes, all spherical planetary bodies have an axis
There are not days on the Sun as we experience on Earth. The Sun does rotate on its axis, but it takes about 27 Earth days for one complete rotation.
the sun does not rotate on one single axis, it has several different axises that spin at different speeds.
no
Anything that rotates has an imaginary line that it appears to rotate around, and that's what's called the "axis". Since the sun definitely rotates, there's an imaginary line through it that it seems to rotate around, and it's completely proper to refer to that imaginary line as the sun's axis.