All of them. A few satellites are tidally locked to their primary (luna for example), but all the planets rotate.
It causes Uranus to rotate on it's side ( in respect to the other planets in the solar system)
All planets do. The difference is that for gas giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune), the speed of the "surface spin" is often quite different from the rotation of the atmosphere, which will vary by latitude.
Yes the Earth does rotate like the other planets (except for the distance of the rotation(assuming your talking about the rotation around the Sun); the wobble of the Earths axis compared to other planets; and the time it takes to rotate)
All the planets in our solar system orbit around the Sun in the same direction.However, there are two planets that rotate on their axis "backwards" compared with the others. They are Uranus and Venus.
Because - Mercury takes that long to rotate once on its axis. Each of the planets in our solar system ratates at different speeds
It causes Uranus to rotate on it's side ( in respect to the other planets in the solar system)
All planets do. The difference is that for gas giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune), the speed of the "surface spin" is often quite different from the rotation of the atmosphere, which will vary by latitude.
Each of them does.
All of them, though some more slowly than others.
Venus is the planet that does not rotate on a top to bottom axis like the other planets in our solar system. It rotates in the opposite direction, from east to west, which is known as retrograde rotation.
Yes, all of the planets rotate around the sun, in the same direction but at different speeds and time periods. well planets rotate on their own axis, the correct term would be revolve. The planets revolve around the sun
All of the planets in the Universe rotate on an axis. They all do.
Uranus and Venus are the two planets in our solar system that rotate on a highly tilted axis. Uranus has an extreme tilt of about 98 degrees, causing it to essentially roll on its side as it orbits the Sun. Venus, on the other hand, has a tilt of about 177 degrees, which means it rotates in the opposite direction to its orbit around the Sun.
Yes the Earth does rotate like the other planets (except for the distance of the rotation(assuming your talking about the rotation around the Sun); the wobble of the Earths axis compared to other planets; and the time it takes to rotate)
Yes. All planets rotate about an axis.
All planets turn on their axis. This is called the planet's rotation; one complete rotation is equal to one day on that planet.
Orbit the sun and rotate on their axis.