If you mean equilibrium or centre of balance then it is at where its diagonals intersect. The intersection of the diagonals is also the centre of symmetry; a rhombus has 2-fold rotation symmettry.
2 if not a square
if it's not a square, 180 degrees
show me a picture of rotation
A rotation of 360 degrees around the origin of (0, 0) will carry a rhombus back onto itself.
Center of rotation
2 if not a square
2
if it's not a square, 180 degrees
show me a picture of rotation
A rotation of 360 degrees around the origin of (0, 0) will carry a rhombus back onto itself.
360 degrees. It cant be 180 because it would just be flipped. 180 would work for a rectangle, but not a rhombus.
Equilateral is an adjective, not a noun and so the question makes no sense. The order of rotation of an equilateral quadrilateral, such as a rhombus, is 1.
A parallelogram, other than a rhombus or rectangle.
I think you mean the centrifugal force. That force points outwards from the center of rotation.
Yes. A tornado has a center of rotation.
Internal rotation refers to the rotation towards the axis of the body. External rotation refers to the rotation away from the center of the body.
If you can rotate (or turn) a figure around a center point by fewer than 360° and the figure appears unchanged, then the figure has rotation symmetry. The point around which you rotate is called the center of rotation, and the smallest angle you need to turn is called the angle of rotation. This figure has rotation symmetry of 72°, and the center of rotation is the center of the figure: