Sun rotates as quick as possible. The same results as Sun as concern its angular speed have all planets that rotates or in other words - all planets with moons.
The reason is electric field ...
kamil.madac@tuke.sk
The Sun is not a solid object; it is a ball of hot, ionized gas. This causes it to exhibit differential rotation, where different latitudes rotate at different rates. The equator rotates faster due to its lower latitude and shorter distance to the Sun's core, while the polar regions rotate more slowly.
About 27 days Since the sun is not solid, it rotates at different rates at different latitudes. One rotation takes 36 days at the poles but only 25 days at the equator.
No, the sun does not rotate around all planets. In our solar system, planets orbit around the sun due to its gravitational pull. The sun itself rotates on its axis, influencing the rotation of the planets but not physically orbiting them.
All the time. (The moon is actually orbiting around the Earth, which is orbiting around the sun)
Yes, all of the planets rotate around the sun, in the same direction but at different speeds and time periods. well planets rotate on their own axis, the correct term would be revolve. The planets revolve around the sun
The Sun does rotate.
In fact, the Sun does rotate.
Earth rotates around the sun .
The sun in facts does not rotate around Venus: Venus rotates are the sun on its axis.
The sun does not rotate. The earth rotates
The sun in facts does not rotate around Venus: Venus rotates are the sun on its axis.
They all rotate, but Venus rotates particularly slowly.
The Sun DOES rotate. See related question.
The Sun, all its planets and the galaxy in which the Sun sits all rotate.
The Sun is not a solid object; it is a ball of hot, ionized gas. This causes it to exhibit differential rotation, where different latitudes rotate at different rates. The equator rotates faster due to its lower latitude and shorter distance to the Sun's core, while the polar regions rotate more slowly.
Neither. The Sun and the Moon both rotate around their own axis. See related questions.
About 27 days Since the sun is not solid, it rotates at different rates at different latitudes. One rotation takes 36 days at the poles but only 25 days at the equator.