The sidereral rotation of Saturn is 10 hours, 39 minutes at the equator. The clouds rotate at a slightly faster period, which varies by latitude.
A planet completes one rotation on its axis every day, causing day and night cycles.
It completes one rotation in a sidereal day.
Jupiter rotates on its axis most rapidly out of all eight of the planets, 9h 55m 30s for one full spin.
The planet Jupiter completes one rotation on its axis every 9.9 hours, which makes it the fastest rotation in the entire Solar System. The Earth's rotation is approximately 24 hours.
Uranus is the slowest rotating planet of the solar system. The speed of rotation of the Uranus around its axis is 17 hours and 24 minutes. It means that the day and night time of Uranus is lesser than the earth's time which is around 24 hours. The time for one revolution around the Sun (Uranus year) is 30,799 Earth days or about 84.3 Earth years.
Saturn
Saturn
Jupiter is the planet that rotates the fastest. It completes one rotation on its axis every 9.9 hours, and is also the biggest.
Neptune completes a full rotation on its axis in 15 hours, 57 minutes, and 59 seconds. This is in terms of Earth hours, making a day on Neptune a short one.
True, Jupiter rotates on it's axis once every 10 hours.
The planet Saturn takes about 10 hours and 39 minutes for it to rotate on its axis. Since the planet does not rotate uniformly the time does vary.
The period of rotation is the time required for a planet to spin around once on its axis. For Earth it is about 23 hours and 56 minutes.
It depends which planet you mean - the Earth takes 23 hours & 56 minutes to rotate once.
A planet completes one rotation on its axis every day, causing day and night cycles.
Jupiter takes about 9 hours 55 minutes to spin once on it's axis which makes it the fastest rotation. Mercury is the fastest spinning planet.
It completes one rotation in a sidereal day.
Jupiter rotates on its axis most rapidly out of all eight of the planets, 9h 55m 30s for one full spin.