Mars rotates from the left to the right. Mars is approximately 48,700,000 miles from Earth and is similar to our planet in that is has an elliptical orbit.
A planet rotates on its axis a point which travels through the north and the south of the planet. On earth the axis is found at the north and south pole of the earth.
Virtually everything in our solar system spins or orbits right-to-left, from the perspective that the Earth's north pole is "up".
Jupiter.
neptune
Mars rotates from the left to the right. Mars is approximately 48,700,000 miles from Earth and is similar to our planet in that is has an elliptical orbit.
It rotates on its axis.
Q rotates it right E rotates it left
Pretty much every planet has an axis, because an axis is what a planet rotates around. Any planet that rotates has an axis, and pretty much every planet known rotates.
The planet is Jupiter. It rotates in just 10 hours.
Uranus is the only planet which rotates on its side, with an axial tilt of 97.86 degrees.
uranus rotates on it's side
A planet's axis is the imaginary line that the planet rotates around, like spinning top.
you don't want to know how my planet rotates ;)
A planet rotates on its axis a point which travels through the north and the south of the planet. On earth the axis is found at the north and south pole of the earth.
There is no calculation for calculating how a plnet revoves with how it rotates
Uranus rotates nearly on its 'side'.