All the way around ... 360 degrees.
The Earth turns about 361.02 degrees per day, on a sidereal basis, measured with respect to far distant stars.
earth is approximately rotating at 66 and a half degrees
The Earth turns about 361.02 degrees per day, on a sidereal basis, measured with respect to far distant stars.
The Earth rotates all the way around in a little over twenty four hours.
A full rotation of Earth is considered one day if only the planet is observed, therefore the Earth will rotate 360 degrees in a day. If the rotation of the Earth is taken into account with the orbit around the sun, the Earth will rotate just under 361 degrees per day.
abot 500 degrees.
360
Rotate 360 degrees
When it turns 360 degrees on its axis that is a day. When it goes right round the Sun that is a year.
The average day temperature is 12 degrees Celsius.
Since Earth has ROUGHLY one full rotation (360 degrees) every day, that is equivalent to 360 degrees / 24 = 15 degrees per hour.
The Earth spins precisely 360 degrees - exactly one complete revolution - in 23 hours 56 minutes. So what's with the 24 hours in a day stuff? The problem is that from one day to the next, the Earth itself has moved along in its orbit - and to make up for that change, the Earth needs to spin for another 4 minutes! So "one day" is the time from noon to noon, but that's actually a little bit more than one turn.