-- It rotates 15 degrees per hour. -- Most places on its surface experience daylight and darkness on a 24-hour cycle. -- It could be the Earth.
The same direction that the Earth rotates around its axis.
There really isn't one. But, Uranus rotates on its side. It still rotates in the same direction, just on its side.
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.
Neptune
Uranus
It rotates on its axis.
Venus (about once a year). Not Mars, it rotates almost as fast as Earth.
Mars. It has a similar day length to Earth, a little longer at 24h 39m 35s (apparent solar day).
-- It rotates 15 degrees per hour. -- Most places on its surface experience daylight and darkness on a 24-hour cycle. -- It could be the Earth.
venus does because it rotates as earth does and it is earths twin baby
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.
The same direction that the Earth rotates around its axis.
There is no planet that has the same size moon as the planet. This is only possible if Pluto was still a planet.
There really isn't one. But, Uranus rotates on its side. It still rotates in the same direction, just on its side.
Uranus is the only planet which rotates on its side, with an axial tilt of 97.86 degrees.