17h 14m 24s
Roughly 4 minutes less than 24 hours.
The Earth makes one rotation on its own axis every 24 hours.
The Earth takes 23 hours, 56 minutes to complete a sidereal orbit (the length of time the constellations appear to take for one rotation), but 1 day, or one rotation of the Earth on its axis is 24 hours.
Neptune completes a full rotation on its axis in 15 hours, 57 minutes, and 59 seconds. This is in terms of Earth hours, making a day on Neptune a short one.
One full rotation on its axis: 23 hours 56 minutes (sidereal), 24 hours (tropical). The difference between the two is whether you measure it relative to the distant stars (sidereal) or the Sun (tropical). One full rotation around the sun: 365.25 days
Roughly 4 minutes less than 24 hours.
24 hours
The Earth makes one rotation on its own axis every 24 hours.
The Earth takes 23 hours, 56 minutes to complete a sidereal orbit (the length of time the constellations appear to take for one rotation), but 1 day, or one rotation of the Earth on its axis is 24 hours.
it takes earth 24 hours or 1 day to rotate on its axis
25.38 earth days = 609.1 hours (25.38 x 24)
it takes mars 24.6 hours to rotate on its axis once
It takes approximately 10 hours for jupiter to spin on its axis
The third planet from the Sun is Earth. It takes 24 hours for the Earth to make one full rotation on its axis.
Not days, just about 17 hours, 14 minutes, 24 seconds.
Neptune completes a full rotation on its axis in 15 hours, 57 minutes, and 59 seconds. This is in terms of Earth hours, making a day on Neptune a short one.
It takes Mercury 1407.6 Earth hours to make one full rotation around its axis.