Junipers typically do not spin at all; their roots keep them firmly anchored to the Earth.
The planet Jupiter, on the other hand, spins once in just 9.8 hours!
Some spin up to hundreds of times a second. AT LEAST ONE OF THEM HAS BEEN MEASURED TO SPIN 700 HUNDRED TIMES PER SECOND, AND OTHERS THAT MAY EVEN SPIN FASTER.
These happen because the axis of Earths spin in inclined at an angle from the normal of to the plane in which it orbits the Sun.
The direction of the "point" of Earth's axis of spin does not change (at least not noticeably on human time scales - there is a 25 thousand year precession). The orbit of the Earth round the Sun means that the north pole of this axis of spin is pointing towards the sun in Summer, away in Winter and sideways in Autumn and Spring.
they spin around fast on a slanted platform
1) The annual orbit of the Earth round its star, the Sun. 2) The inclination of Earth's axis of spin to the plane of the orbit.
The rotational period, or how fast a planet spins on its axis, determines the length of a day on that planet. A faster spin results in shorter days, while a slower spin leads to longer days.
You get more aligned with your axis as you sit.
There is no such bowling style as 'fast in spin' or 'fast out spin in'.
rotationis one complete spin on earths axis!!!
Haumea spins on its axis very quickly, completing one full rotation in about 3.9 hours.
Its axis.
24 hours = 1day for it to spin around once on its axis
The rotation of the planet on its axis of spin. The spin is responsible for the day and the night.
Yes it does!
astronomy
rotation
On its axis Earth rotates around the sun.