Neptune takes 16 hours 6 minutes and 36 seconds to rotate or spin once on its axis, or 0.67125 Earth days.
It takes roughly 6.4 Earth days for Neptune to rotate on it's axis.
No, Jupiter is the fastest planet to rotate about its axis. Mercury rotates very slowly (about 59 Earth days per rotation).
Sidereal rotation period is approximately one Neptunian day, time taken to rotate once on its axis. This is 0.67 days or 16h 6min 36sec.
its rotation takes about 243 Earth days to rotate on its axis
Mercury. Its takes around 58.65 days to rotate once on its axis relative to background stars.
It takes roughly 6.4 Earth days for Neptune to rotate on it's axis.
0.67 earth days.
It depends which planet you mean - the Earth takes 23 hours & 56 minutes to rotate once.
No, Jupiter is the fastest planet to rotate about its axis. Mercury rotates very slowly (about 59 Earth days per rotation).
There is no planet that takes 25 days to rotate on its axis. However, the equator of the sun rotates in about 25 days. (Not all of the sun rotates at the same speed, it slows down as it gets closer to the poles. At the poles, the sun rotates in about 36 days, and in the middle it takes about 30 days.)
It takes 58 days for mercury to rotate on its axis.
There is no such planet known. The planet with the longest rotation period is Venus. That rotates in about 243 Earth days.
59 Earth days to rotate on its axis, 87.96 Earth days to orbit the sun.
Mercury takes 59 earth days to make one full rotation around its axis.
Mercury. It actually takes longer to rotate on its axis (89 days) than it takes to orbit the sun.
Sidereal rotation period is approximately one Neptunian day, time taken to rotate once on its axis. This is 0.67 days or 16h 6min 36sec.
Moon moves around the planet Earth in an orbit and rotates on its own axis. It takes moon around 28 days to move around the planet Earth. Normally, the moon takes around 27 days to rotate on its axis.