360 degrees
A full rotation of Earth is considered one day if only the planet is observed, therefore the Earth will rotate 360 degrees in a day. If the rotation of the Earth is taken into account with the orbit around the sun, the Earth will rotate just under 361 degrees per day.
Yes, the moon and visible planets in our solar system are typically within a few degrees of the ecliptic, which is the plane of Earth's orbit around the sun. This is because they all orbit the sun in roughly the same plane, so they appear to move along the same path in the sky as seen from Earth.
All the time. (The moon is actually orbiting around the Earth, which is orbiting around the sun)
yesss he did he thought the earth was in the middle and all the plantes including the sun reolve around the earth.
No, Neptune has a relatively small axial tilt of about 28 degrees, similar to Earth's 23.5-degree tilt. This slight tilt is responsible for the planet's seasons, but it is not as extreme as some other planets in our solar system.
Any line all the way around the Earth covers 360 degrees of longitude.
The Earth rotates all the way around in a little over twenty four hours.
All the way around ... 360 degrees.
All the way around anything that's measured in angles is typically 360 degrees, and the earth is no exception.
The earth is divided into 360 degrees longitude.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles. The Equator is at 0 degrees latitude.
A full rotation of Earth is considered one day if only the planet is observed, therefore the Earth will rotate 360 degrees in a day. If the rotation of the Earth is taken into account with the orbit around the sun, the Earth will rotate just under 361 degrees per day.
No it does not. Since the Earth is constantly spinning, and also rotating around the sun, the earth will point in all 360 degrees.
180, all the way from -90 at the south pole to +90 at the north pole.
A circle is 360 degrees. Half of a circle is 180 degrees and a quarter of a circle is 90 degrees.There are 360 degrees in a circle
360360 degrees.
There are several ways to come at this answer, most of them way too technical and arcane to bother with. The easiest answer to state and understand may be simply the fact that each parallel of latitude goes all the way around the Earth, but each meridian of longitude only goes half-way around the Earth, so you need more of them to cover the whole Earth. Does that do anything for you ? And by the way . . . there are only 180 degrees of latitude.