23.93443 hours per rotation (rounded), or 1.00274 rotation per day (rounded).
Since the Earth's surface is nominally one solid piece, it all rotates together, and
that rate is the same for any place on Earth.
The Sun has a differential rotation, caused by Coriolis forces. Near the equator, one rotation takes about 25 days; near the poles, one rotation takes about 34 days.
4332.59 Days to orbit the sun
The rotation rate of the Sun varies with latitude; at the equator, it rotates approximately once every 25 days. In contrast, at the poles, the rotation period can take about 35 days. This differential rotation is due to the Sun's gaseous nature, allowing different latitudinal bands to rotate at different speeds.
One quarter of a day (24 hours), or 6 hours.
For Earth, it takes 365 days to rotate around the sun.
It takes 24 earth hours for it to make a full rotation.
The Sun has a differential rotation, caused by Coriolis forces. Near the equator, one rotation takes about 25 days; near the poles, one rotation takes about 34 days.
232 days
It takes the earth one year to make one rotation around the Sun!
It takes 25 days to rotate at the equator and 36 days to rotate at the poles.
it take Venus about 42 earth days to make a complete rotation on its axis
27.3 days.
According to the relevant Wiki...Solar rotation is able to vary with latitude because the Sun is composed of a gaseous plasma. The rate of rotation is observed to be fastest at the equator (latitude φ=0 deg), and to decrease as latitude increases.Also according to the Wiki...rotation period(at equator)25.05 days(at 16° latitude)25.38 days25d 9h 7min 12s (at poles)34.4 days Rotation velocity(at equator)7.189×103km/h
it takes 88 days
Mercury is 58.646 earth days.
Approximately 24 hours.
Venus, which rotates backwards in comparison to Earth, takes 243 days to make a full rotation on its axis.