Moon
A planet rotates on its axis, an imaginary line that runs from its North Pole to its South Pole. This rotation determines the length of a day on the planet.
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 planet that rotates on its side, with an axial tilt of about 98 degrees. This unusual tilt causes extreme seasonal variations on Uranus, where one pole can be in constant sunlight while the other experiences continuous darkness for long periods.
you don't want to know how my planet rotates ;)
Uranus rotates nearly on its 'side'.
There is no calculation for calculating how a plnet revoves with how it 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.
They all rotate, but Venus rotates particularly slowly.
There really isn't one. But, Uranus rotates on its side. It still rotates in the same direction, just on its side.
jupiter
Its Uranus...