Approx 5,800 miles per hour.
At New York City's latitude of 40.7128° N, the Earth is spinning at roughly 800 miles per hour relative to its axis. This speed decreases as you move towards the poles, and increases closer to the equator.
Uranus is odd because it spins on it's side. Instead of spinning slightly off the vertical in a counter-clockwise position like the other planets in our solar system, Uranus spins slightly off it's horizontal axis and spins clockwise.
Because the Earth is spinning - at about 1000 miles per hour at the equator.
Uranus rotates on it's axis approximately every 24 and 37 minutes.
Uranus spin is different from all the other planets. Instead of spinning like a top, it spins like a wheel. Its north and south poles stick out to the side. Scientists think Uranus spins this way because a long time ago a large object collided with Uranus and knocked it over.
At New York City's latitude of 40.7128° N, the Earth is spinning at roughly 800 miles per hour relative to its axis. This speed decreases as you move towards the poles, and increases closer to the equator.
Spinning on an Axis was created in 2001.
Jupiter is the planet known for having the fastest rotation, spinning on its axis at a speed of approximately 28,273 miles per hour or about a quarter mile per second.
The orbital speed of a planet is the time it takes to cycle around the sun. The spinning speed of a planet is the time it takes for the planet to rotate on it's axis.
The planet Uranus has an rotational axis of 97.77°.
uranus' axis is almost over 90% hoped that helped :D
A planet spinning on it's axis is called rotation
Uranus is odd because it spins on it's side. Instead of spinning slightly off the vertical in a counter-clockwise position like the other planets in our solar system, Uranus spins slightly off it's horizontal axis and spins clockwise.
Uranus.
Because the Earth is spinning - at about 1000 miles per hour at the equator.
Uranus rotates on it's axis approximately every 24 and 37 minutes.
Because you never feel speed. You only feel changes in speed. That's why it's so easy to read book, or take a nap, in a car driving smoothly past the ground at 60 or 70 miles an hour, or on a jetliner cruising past the ground at 400 miles an hour.