no
All of the planets in the Universe rotate on an axis. They all do.
Yes. All planets rotate about an axis.
All of them. A few satellites are tidally locked to their primary (luna for example), but all the planets rotate.
Mars does not rotate around the Earth. It rotates on its axis, and it revolves around the Sun, just as all the other planets do.
Yes, all of the planets rotate around the sun, in the same direction but at different speeds and time periods. well planets rotate on their own axis, the correct term would be revolve. The planets revolve around the sun
No, the sun does not rotate around all planets. In our solar system, planets orbit around the sun due to its gravitational pull. The sun itself rotates on its axis, influencing the rotation of the planets but not physically orbiting them.
All the planets rotate on their axes and it would be a very unusual thing to find a planet that did not rotate.
No, all the planets, moons, asteroids and the sun do.
around what? if its earth then it would rotate on its axis and and if ur talkin bout the revolution then if it is before earth (Venus, Mercury) then it wouldn't orbit around earth they would only orbit the sun and Venus would orbit mercury. and all of the planets after earth (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, others) they would orbit the sun and all the planets before them. but all planets rotate on their axis but it may take shorter or longer time to rotate once than how long it takes for earth to rotate on its axis once.
well they rotate on their axis as they orbit the sun
All 8 planets in our solar system rotate around a star, our sun. Virtually all planets rotate around a star.
All the planets in our solar system orbit around the Sun in the same direction.However, there are two planets that rotate on their axis "backwards" compared with the others. They are Uranus and Venus.