Actually,as the planet Revolve and Rotate the path is an orbit....^_^
It means to revolve around the sun and rotate on its axis
In about 9 hours 50 minutes, Jupiter rotates once. I think that's what you meant. Astronomers use "rotate" not "revolve" for the spin of a planet.
No, by definition a body must revolve around the sun in its own path to be planet. The moon has a path around earth and the sun.
no. they all rotate and revolve at different speeds.
The very short answer to that is Gravity Im affraid.
Yes, an asteroid revolve the sun but not necessary rotate.
Yes, an asteroid revolve the sun but not necessary rotate.
Yes, all the planets in our solar system revolve and rotate.
The path that the planet follows is simply called the orbit. Orbit can mean 'to revolve around the sun' or it can be referred to as the path itself, e.g. 'Earth is following its orbit.'
Because they each have a certain path that they follow, and the paths do not intersect.
The path along which a planet travels is called its orbit. Orbits are typically elliptical in shape, following the gravitational pull of the star around which they revolve.
rotate - to revolve round a centre or axis