about 2000km per our
they spin and move fast
Jupiter's rapid rotation rate causes its equator to bulge out and its poles to be flattened. It looks a bit like a squashed ball; the planet is seven percent larger at the equator than at the poles.
Jupiter rotates on its axis once every 9.9 hours, which is the length of its day.
Faster than some, not as fast as others. We're used to it, and we'd probably be upset if it changed. The Earth spins at 15 degrees per hour, 360 degrees per day. Venus and Mercury hardly spin at all; 243 days for Venus, 58 days for Mercury. The Sun spins at about 27 days per rotation, but because the Sun isn't solid, different parts spin at different speeds. Jupiter takes 10 HOURS, Saturn 11 HOURS. Uranus and Neptune are faster than Earth, not so fast as Jupiter. Some pulsars - rotating neutron stars - spin tens or hundreds of times per SECOND.
because it does haha!
The Great red Spot which is a anti-cyclonic hurricane much like ones on earth but much stronger and spin at a different axis
There is no such bowling style as 'fast in spin' or 'fast out spin in'.
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!
Yes, Jupiter does have storms, most notably the Great Red Spot, a massive anticyclonic storm that has been raging for at least 400 years. Jupiter's atmosphere is constantly in motion, with high-speed winds and turbulent weather patterns creating numerous storms across the planet. These storms are fueled by the planet's rapid rotation and its immense size, which generate strong atmospheric dynamics.
The weather patterns on Jupiter are simpler than on earth because the storms, such as the big red spot, on Jupiter spin the opposite way as hurricanes on earth. Storms on Jupiter do not need water. All it needs are clouds. Storms on earth need clouds AND water.
Jupiter spins from West to East.
Fast
The planet Jupiter must spin to keep its self up its called gravity and without it all the planets would go around space and collide of worse so it must "spin" to keep "afloat "
Fast Japanese Spin Cycle was created in 1994.
Easy answer: it doesn't. Jupiter revolves or orbits the sun in 11.86 years, or about 4,226 days. The rod 'Spin' does not mean the same as 'revolve'.
No they spin very very fast
you got to spin realy realy fast freaze it 10 times en then save in different spot en then you get traners