In space, EVERYTHING spins; fast or slow, everything rotates. The physical law of conservation of angular momentum enforces that. So it would be somewhat strange if the Earth itself didn't rotate. (But if the Earth didn't rotate, we wouldn't be here to notice the fact!)
And the "axis" is just the centerline of the rotation, so everything that spins - and that's everything! - rotates "around its own axis".
All of the planets and stars rotate; the Sun rotates once every 26 days, Jupiter in 10 hours or so, Mars in 24 hours 40 minutes. Venus is sort of the "odd man out"; it hardly rotates at all, and rotates in the opposite direction of all the other planets of our solar system.
So, what CAUSED the rotation? There are dozens of things that might have caused it, and we don't know which ones - or in what magnitude - might have played a role.
Foremost, every atom of the cloud of gas and dust that condensed 5 billion years ago had its own velocity. So when they all came together, there would have been some overall rotation of the gas cloud. When the cloud's own gravity caused it to form the Sun and the planets, each eddy in the cloud would have included its own component of the overall rotation. The proto-Earth would have been rotating regardless of what else happened later.
Another big factor would have been the collision between the proto-Earth and another body in the solar system back when the solar system was still very young. We believe that the "other body" was of nearly planetary size, perhaps even as large as Mars. If the collision were't precisely centered - which would have been astonishingly unlikely - then the impact could easily have set the Earth spinning, or changed the rate of the spin. It's at least plausible that the 23 degree angular tilt of the Earth's rotation as compared to the plane of the solar system was caused by this collision. The debris from this collision
Add in the "Early Heavy Bombardment" period in Earth's history, as most of the stray bodies of the solar system crashed into each other for the first billion or so years. So you see, there are any number of causes that contributed to the Earth's spin.
The moon around the earth. The earth around the sun. Giant teacups around the teapot on a ride at Disney World.
The time it takes for the Earth to revolve around the Sun is called a "year."
Nothing but the moon revolves around earth. Everything including the earth revolves around the sun. The Sun has many orbits which is what we are currently on. Our orbit of the sun. Hope I helped...
Yes, the Earth and other planets in our solar system revolve around the Sun in elliptical orbits due to the force of gravity. This orbital motion is what causes the planets to move in their respective paths around the Sun.
no
The Sun does not revolve around itself; it rotates on its axis. It takes about 25 Earth days for the Sun to complete one rotation.
The Earth. Actually, technically, the Moon and Earth revolve around a common center of gravity, but that center of gravity falls within the earth itself.
The earth revolves around the sun, due to the gravitational pull of the sun. The sun makes it revolve around itself, with the help of its gravitational force.
The moon around the earth. The earth around the sun. Giant teacups around the teapot on a ride at Disney World.
For the Earth, it takes 365 days to revolve around the Sun.
If you are asking if earth are revolving around itself, the answer is yes, it does. The earth is not only orbiting around the sun, it's also rotating around it's own axis.
It will take the moon 27.32 days to revolve around the earth.
The Earth does not revolve around Venus. Both the Earth and Venus revolve around the Sun. The Earth takes about 365.25 days to do so, and Venus takes about 224.7 days to do so.
No, the Earth revolves around the sun.
No all planets revolve around the nearest star. In our case, the sun.
It takes 365 1/4 days to revolve around earth.
No, the moon does not revolve around the sun. The Earth does though. You might be getting confused because the moon revolves around the Earth.