It takes one month for the moon to spin on it's axis.
27.32 days
The moon takes about 27.3 days to spin around its axis once, which is the same amount of time it takes to complete one orbit around Earth. This synchronous rotation is why we always see the same face of the moon from Earth.
27.32 earth days
ONCE, that is where the different sizes of the moon come from. Full moon occurs once a month. The earth turns once each day on its own axis making day and night occur. The earth revolves around the sun once each year.
-- The moon you see in our sky is nowhere near Jupiter. It revolves around the Earth once every 29.53 days. -- As of right now (early 2012), we know of 66 moons that revolve around Jupiter. Their orbital periods range from 7 hours to 982 days.
The moon makes 1 rotation for 1 revolution around the earth. Both are 27.3 days long.
It takes about 27.3 days for the Moon to spin once on its axis, which is the same amount of time it takes to complete one orbit around the Earth. This synchronous rotation causes the same side of the Moon to always face Earth.
The Moon spins as it revolves around the Earth. In other words, one revolution (about 27 1/2 days) = one rotation.
No. Each of those "days" of which the question speaks is the length of time it takes for the earth to spin on its axis. The question is actually referring to the moon, which takes 27.32 days to spin once on its axis.
Approximately 14 days.
The moon spins quite slowly, about once each 27 days, this monthly rate of spin matches the rate at which the moon revolves about the Eath.
It takes 1 day or 24 hours for the moon to spin on it's axis. It takes 28 days or 27.322(to be exact) or you could say 1 month for moon to revolve around the Earth. THE REVOLUTION!