It's 2/3 of its orbital period (of 88 days).
58 and 2/3 days.
Mercury rotates in about 58.65 Earth days.
It is called synchronous rotation when the rotation and orbit take the same amount of time.
no they are not
Io, Europa, and Ganymede, the three largest moons of Jupiter, have synchronized rotation periods due to a phenomenon known as orbital resonance. Io takes about 1.8 days to complete one rotation, while Europa and Ganymede have rotation periods of about 3.5 days and 7.2 days, respectively. Despite their differing rotation periods, they are locked in a 1:2:4 resonance, meaning that for every one orbit Io makes, Europa completes half an orbit, and Ganymede completes a quarter. This gravitational interaction keeps their rotation periods closely linked.
Toledo Mercurys was created in 1947.
Toledo Mercurys ended in 1962.
mercurys period number is 80
mercurys surface material is made out of nothing but craters
One.That is the definition of a rotation. Once around it's axis.See related question for the periods
They all have.
Its very slow, despite orbiting the sun in a very quick time. it rotates once every 58.6 days relative to background stars.
Cause us to always see the same "face" of the moon. This is called synchronous rotation.