A meteor is a chunk of something burning up in the Earth's atmosphere. It's kind of pointless to wonder about their rotation, because they only exist for a couple of seconds anyway.
If you meant an asteroid ... it depends on the asteroid. 1 Ceres, for example, rotates in about 9 hours; 2 Pallas in a bit under 8 hours; 3 Juno in about 7 hours 12 minutes, 4 Vesta in about 5 hours 20 minutes, and so on. You shouldn't think they're all fast (compared to Earth) either; 10 Hygeia's rotation period is longer than Earth's by over three and a half hours.
Uranus takes 17 hours and 14 minutes to complete one rotation on its axis. This makes one day on Uranus less than one day on Earth.
This idea of a sidereal rotation is generally what we accept as a day and is considered one rotation in terms of a day, and on Venus this time period is 117 days. - Venus
comet rotation period
It varies
meteors may be seen every night, preferably just before dawn, when their apparent velocity will be greater because of the rotation of the Earth. Thousands each night.
Meteors are not that important, meteorites might be.
No. New meteors arrive every day.
Of what? Earth? Tires on your car?
the hole made by meteors craters
24 hours rotation
People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.People have been seeing meteors as long as people can remember, so there is not a particular time they can be said to have been discovered or a person who can be said to have discovered them.
Not really; meteors are so insignificant, compared to the mass of the Earth, that it makes precisely zero difference whether the meteor strikes the Earth going with or going against the Earth's rotation. Even a dinosaur killer that would devastate the biosphere isn't going to affect the Earth's rotation.
Depending on the axis of rotation, it would be either a vovulus (rotation on the long axis) or a torsion (rotation perpendicular to the long axis).
Comets and meteors are made of rocks and boulders same as on earth. But since they are in space for a long time, they might have some differences, little differences.
25 days for a rotation at the equator, 34 days for a rotation near the poles.
Rotation (Retrograde) 243 Days, 0.5 Hours
meteors may be seen every night, preferably just before dawn, when their apparent velocity will be greater because of the rotation of the Earth. Thousands each night.
Astronomers see more meteors from midnight to dawn because that's the time when the Earth is rotating into the direction of its orbit around the sun. This means that more meteoroids are likely to collide with our atmosphere in that part of our planet's rotation.
Alex is awesome
Depends on the speed of an object.
27.3 days.