The Earth takes approximately 24 hours to rotate a full round - 360 degrees. That is the same as 15 degrees per hour.
The Earth takes approximately 24 hours to rotate a full round - 360 degrees. That is the same as 15 degrees per hour.
The Earth takes approximately 24 hours to rotate a full round - 360 degrees. That is the same as 15 degrees per hour.
The Earth takes approximately 24 hours to rotate a full round - 360 degrees. That is the same as 15 degrees per hour.
Most satellites in low Earth orbit rotate around the Earth approximately 15 times per day. This means they orbit the Earth about every 90 minutes.
Neptune takes 16 hours 6 minutes and 36 seconds to rotate or spin once on its axis, or 0.67125 Earth days.
Clicking "Rotate Right" on the Drawing toolbar typically rotates an image by 15 degrees each time. Therefore, if you click it twice, the image will rotate a total of 30 degrees to the right.
Let's do some math: The Earth rotates in 24 hours and during that time it covers 360 degrees. One hour has 60 minutes, so a day has 24x60=1440 minutes. Therefore, the Earth covers 360/1440 degrees per day and 0.25 degrees per minute.
If by "world" you mean planet Earth: it rotates a tiny bit less than one rotation (or 360 degrees) every day.
1 hour
Forty five degrees.
15
It moves through 15 degrees every 30 minutes.
15
The Earth rotates 14.9590452 degrees per hour.
1 year = 525,948.766 minutes
Roughly 4 minutes.
23 hours and 56 minutes.
23h 56m
it takes one hour for the earth to rotate 15 degrees so the answer is 30 degrees
It depends which planet you mean - the Earth takes 23 hours & 56 minutes to rotate once.