Light and dark, day and night, does, on
most of the Earth but not everywhere.
No, the Earth rotates once in a day.
Earth rotates on its axis.
No, not at all. Tides are caused by the gravitational pull of the moon and the sun on the earth's waters. The earth rotates once every 24 hours and the earth/moon system rotates roughly once every 27 days. The complex interaction between the two creates a pattern that repeats roughly every 24 hours and 50 minutes. In other words, the whole pattern of high and low tides shifts by a bit under an hour every day. But there's still more: Within that pattern there oscillations that produce two different high and two different low tides every day, so there's about 6 hours and 12 minutes between any pair of high and low tides.
Earth rotates on its axis once in about 24 hours. Earth revolves in its orbit around the Sun once every year.
Observations that repeat at regular intervals of nearly 24 hours ... nearly the same time every day or night ... are the result of earth's axial rotation. Observations that repeat at regular intervals of roughly one year are the result of earth's orbital revolution.
23.89 earth time in hours.
The Earth rotates through 360 degrees longitude every 24 hours.
Earth rotates on its axis!!!
False. Earth rotates on its axis about once every 24 hours, causing day and night cycles. It completes one full rotation every day.
Yes, every 24 hours the earth rotates on its axis once. This is one day.
Yes, Jupiter rotates once every ten hours, compared to earth's rotation once every 24 hours. This is more than twice as fast.
Old answer: Every day. New one : I think every year.