The Earth revolves around the sun, or goes around it. The Earth rotates on its axis, or spins.
Since the sun is not a solid body, different latitude zones on it rotate at different rates,so the answer is a range of rotation periods.The range is between 25 and 36 days, for different latitudes on the sun's surface.
The first to realize that the Earth revolved around the Sun was Aristarchus of Samos, an ancient Greek mathematician and astronomer, about 2400 years ago.
You rotate the nosepiece or turret to switch between different objectives on a microscope. This allows you to easily change the magnification level for better viewing of the specimen.
No.
A revolved section is made by revolving a cross section view 90° about an axis of revolution and superimposing the section view on the orthographic. A removed section is similar except the view is removed to another part of the drawing. : )
earth rotate
Because the Sun is not solid, different parts rotate at different speeds. Near the equator of the Sun, it rotates once in about 26 days, while the polar regions rotate in about 33 days.
Yes it does. In fact, if it weren't spinning, then there wouldn't be any axis. Since the sun isn't solid, it doesn't have to rotate all in one piece, like the earth does. Different latitudes on the sun rotate with different periods, ranging between about 30 and 36 days.
You can't rotate trees on Farmville. You can only move them to a different spot on the farm.
Your question is very vague. To "rotate" something, you grab it and turn it in a different direction.
Since the Sun is gas, different portions rotate at different rates. The gasses at the equator rotate once in about 25.6 days. At 60-degrees latitude, the gasses rotate in about 30.9 days. Polar regions rotate about once every 36 days. http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/astronomy/sun/rotation.shtml
Yes, some faster than others. In fact, virtually all spacial bodies rotate.