1.0027378 rev/day (revolutions per day)
13.369 rotations, and 12.368 cycles of phases.
Answer #1:It takes just under 24 hours for the Earth to rotate once on its axis.So in a two-week period (14 days)it would be 14 complete rotations.================================Answer #2:It takes 23.9344696 hours (rounded) for the Earth to rotate on its axis.Two weeks means 14 days of 24 hours each. So in a period of two weeks,the earth makes 14.038331 complete rotations. None of this has anythingto do with the number of days in a year.To put it another way, the Earth completes 14 rotations about 55minutes 3secondsbefore the two weeks has ended. That's why two weeks from today, any starwill reach the same place in the sky about an hour earlier than it gets there tonight.
About 240. (~24 * 10). If you meant orbits around the sun instead, that's about 87,600 hours ((~24 * 365) * 10).
365 rotations per revolution.
13.0356 complete rotations (rounded)
The period of rotation of Saturn is 1 Saturn day. Measured in comparision to Earth, Saturn rotates about once every 10 Earth hours, so you could say that Saturn rotates 2.4 times an Earth day.
182.5
Assuming you meant March 15, 2013, the Earth completes one rotation approximately every 24 hours. By March 15, 2013, the Earth would have completed 15 full rotations in March, plus an additional 14 days in February, totaling 43 complete rotations since the start of the month.
During each complete revolution around the sun, the earth makes 365.24 rotations on its axis.
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
Jupiter has a rotational period of about 9.9 hours. In one Earth week, which is 168 hours, Jupiter completes approximately 17 rotations. This means that in the span of a week, Jupiter experiences a significant number of its day-night cycles compared to Earth.
One rotation per day (or, if you want more precision, one rotation in 23 hours and 56 minutes); it's about 14.04 rotations.