-- It rotates 15 degrees per hour.
-- Most places on its surface experience daylight and darkness on a 24-hour cycle.
-- It could be the Earth.
Uranus.
Uranus is the planet that rotates at about a 90-degree angle compared to the other planets in our solar system. This unique tilt causes Uranus to essentially roll on its side as it orbits the Sun.
This must be Uranus. "On its side" isn't a very scientific way of putting it. It means that the planet's axis is tilted at about 90 degrees (98 degrees actually) from the perpendicular to its orbital plane.
Mars. It has a very similar axis tilt and rotation period.
The blue-green planet that rotates on its side due to the tilt of its axis is Uranus. Its axis is tilted at about 98 degrees relative to its orbit around the Sun, causing it to essentially roll on its side as it orbits.
If a planet rotates 360 degrees during a 24-hour period, it indicates that it has a day-night cycle lasting 24 hours. This rotation affects the planet's climate, weather patterns, and the distribution of sunlight across its surface. A consistent rotation period can also influence the planet's atmosphere and ecosystems, supporting life as we know it.
Venus
Uranus is the only planet which rotates on its side, with an axial tilt of 97.86 degrees.
The Earth rotates on its axis in one day. Strictly speaking that's the "sidereal day" not the "solar day". Also, by definition, each planet rotates once in a period that's the "sidereal day" for that particular planet.
Uranus.
Venus has the slowest rotational period- 243 days to rotate once.
A planet rotates on its axis, an imaginary line that runs from its North Pole to its South Pole. This rotation determines the length of a day on the planet.
There is no such planet known. The planet with the longest rotation period is Venus. That rotates in about 243 Earth days.
The planet with the highest rotational speed in our solar system is Jupiter, with a period just under ten hours.
Uranus is the planet that rotates on its side. Its axis is tilted at an angle of about 98 degrees relative to its orbit around the Sun, causing it to essentially roll on its side as it orbits.
Uranus is the planet that rotates at about a 90-degree angle compared to the other planets in our solar system. This unique tilt causes Uranus to essentially roll on its side as it orbits the Sun.
Uranus is the planet that rotates on its side, with an axial tilt of about 98 degrees. This unusual tilt causes extreme seasonal variations on Uranus, where one pole can be in constant sunlight while the other experiences continuous darkness for long periods.