ask the question more clearly dum head
Romulus and Remus are tho two planets tidally locked in star trek nemesis
In general terms a day for a planet is the time taken for the planet to make on rotation on its own axis. Likewise a year for a planet is the time taken for the planet to make one orbit (rotation round) its primary star. Where a planet is tidally locked to its primary, the day length and the year length will be the same, such that the planet keeps one face permanently towards it primary (like the Moon does to the Earth).
don't do anything bad and then you won't be locked
all day and all night
it falls in the habitable zone of its star, it has oxygen in it's atmosphere, and it has water. Those are the seeds of life and Gliese 581g most likely has them all! The only bad thing about it is that this planet is tidally locked. It's always day on one side, always night on the other.
gsta
If it were tidally locked, night and day would not exist and the temperature difference between the light side and the dark side would be much more, perhaps enough to boil off the oceans. If it were near a red dwarf, it would depend on the size of the orbit. Since the star would be much smaller than the Sun, the orbit would have to be a lot smaller to allow a similar power density at the Earth's surface. That might mean a much shorter year.
No. Nor does any other star, unless there is an unknown companion to our Sun, like the hypothetical "Nemesis".No. Nor does any other star, unless there is an unknown companion to our Sun, like the hypothetical "Nemesis".No. Nor does any other star, unless there is an unknown companion to our Sun, like the hypothetical "Nemesis".No. Nor does any other star, unless there is an unknown companion to our Sun, like the hypothetical "Nemesis".
You probably mean 'rotate'. If a 'planet' is not revolving (orbiting) then it cannot be a planet and would eventually crash into its star. There is no problem if a planet is not rotating on its axis, but you will need to carefully define what kind of rotation you mean. If a planet has no sidereal rotation (a situation that would be unlikely if not impossible) then from the perspective of the sun it orbits, it will have the apparentrotation of once per orbit. If the planet is tidally locked with its sun (a more likely scenario) then from the sun's perspective there is no rotation, but there is one sidereal rotation per orbit. A body orbiting a sun or other body will 'rotate' in one way or the other.
If u have a email, send a email to support@moviestarplanet.co.uk mail them the code number and they will tell you why you have been locked and if the lock will remain or if you will be unlocked.
Star Trek Nemesis, Star Trek the Motion Picture.
Star Trek Voyager - 1995 Nemesis 4-4 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:PG