Anything that rotates has an imaginary line that it appears to rotate around,
and that's what's called the "axis". Since the sun definitely rotates, there's an
imaginary line through it that it seems to rotate around, and it's completely
proper to refer to that imaginary line as the sun's axis.
yes
The sun rotates on its axis and revolves around the galactic centre.
Earth takes 24 hours to revolve on its axis. A revolution is orbiting around the sun and not on its axis.
During an equinox, neither the North nor the South end of Earth's axis is tilted away from the Sun. This is because during an equinox, the tilt of Earth's axis is perpendicular to the Sun's rays, causing equal illumination of both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
The Sun stays still while the Earth rotates on its axis while revolving around the Sun. The Moon rotates on its axis while revolving around the Earth.
It rotates.
The earth sots on its axis at 23.5 degrees as it revolvees around the sun.
On its axis Earth rotates around the sun.
Yes, all spherical planetary bodies have an axis
no
No ,but it does rotate on it's own axis.
The axis of the earth is tilted in the plane of its orbit. As the earth orbits the sun, the axis is tilted toward the sun and away from the sun and this creates the seasons.
The Earth rotates on its axis and revolves around the sun.
If you mean whether the Sun rotates around an axis: yes, it does.
why the sun is higher in summer is because the earths top of the axis is pointed to the sun which makes this hotter and in winter the axis is pointed away from the sun which makes it colder
axis
it gets bigger