1. round the sun. 2. round its own axis.
7 rotations
A double salchow has 2 rotations.
A circle represents one complete rotation, which corresponds to an angle of 360 degrees or (2\pi) radians. Since rotations can be measured in multiples, there are infinitely many rotations in a circle, including both full rotations (360 degrees) and fractional rotations (e.g., half a rotation at 180 degrees).
They are bigger because the Outer Planets had less gas and dust taken away from them when the solar system was forming. The Inner planets were closer to the sun, so the sun took more gas and dust away from those bodies, but didn't take away from the Outer bodies.
365 rotations per revolution.
A bicycle should not make any rotations! The number of rotations made by the wheels of a bicycle will depend on the wheel size.
The answer will depend on 900 WHAT? The earth rotates 900 times in 900 days, for example, and around 328,725 rotations in 900 years.If its degrees then:-900/360 = 2.5 rotations
In mathematics, one full rotation is equivalent to 360 degrees. Therefore, to find out how many rotations are in 450 degrees, we need to divide 450 by 360. This gives us 1.25 rotations, meaning there is one full rotation and an additional quarter rotation in 450 degrees.
The planet Uranus's rotation is sideways compared to the rotations of all the other planets and to it's orbit around the sun.
The planets orbit in the same plane because there is no force to take them out of the plane. The plane is the plane of the average rotations of all the elements of the cloud of gases that made up the solar system.
Jovian planets, such as Jupiter and Saturn, have shorter rotations due to their gaseous composition and rapid spinning, which allows them to complete a rotation in just a few hours. However, their revolutions are longer because they are located farther from the Sun, resulting in a greater orbital distance that requires more time to complete one full orbit. This combination of fast rotation and slow revolution is characteristic of these massive, gaseous planets.
182.5