All of the planets rotate.
No, Jupiter is the fastest planet to rotate about its axis. Mercury rotates very slowly (about 59 Earth days per rotation).
Jupiter rotates on its axis most rapidly out of all of the planets, 9h 55m 30s for one full spin. Haumea is a small dwarf planet, it rotates once in only 3h 54m 56s
True, Jupiter rotates on it's axis once every 10 hours.
I assume you're talking about in our own solar system.Jupiter has the fastest rotation, at about 10 hours. Saturn is just behind it, at 10.5 hours.Both these planets are not solid, so have differential rotation; those figures are at the equator.Interestingly, all the giant planets take less time to rotate than Earth does. Mars has a rotation period that's almost equal to Earth's, Mercury rotates about once every two months, and Venus rotates about once every 8 months (and does so backward).
jupiter
All of the planets rotate.
Jupiter is the planet that rotates the fastest. It completes one rotation on its axis every 9.9 hours, and is also the biggest.
Uranus... interestingly, most of Uranus's atmosphere rotates faster than the interior; the planet's fastest winds blow portions of the atmosphere around the planet in only 14 hours.Uranus.
Jupiter rotates fastest, in just under ten hours.
Mercury is the fastest orbiting planet in the inner Solar System, with an average orbital velocity of 47.87 km/s.
In our solar system Jupiter rotates on its axis the fastest. Mercury revolves around the sun in the shortest time
Because it is the closest to the sun
No, Jupiter is the fastest planet to rotate about its axis. Mercury rotates very slowly (about 59 Earth days per rotation).
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.
Jupiter rotates on its axis most rapidly out of all of the planets, 9h 55m 30s for one full spin. Haumea is a small dwarf planet, it rotates once in only 3h 54m 56s
The planet with the fastest wind speed is Neptune, with a speed of 2000 km/h (1,242.742 miles/h).