The length of rotation typically refers to the distance traveled by a point on a rotating object as it completes one full rotation around its axis. It is calculated based on the circumference of the circle traced by the rotating point.
Mars has a rotation similar to Earth, known as prograde rotation, where it rotates on its axis in the same direction as it orbits the sun. It takes about 24.6 hours for Mars to complete one full rotation.
Zero at the poles, about 1000 mph at the equator.
The time it takes for a planet to complete one full rotation on its axis, known as a "day," varies depending on the planet. Earth takes approximately 24 hours for one full rotation, while other planets like Mars or Jupiter have different rotation periods.
A complete turn of a planet on its axis is known as a "day." This rotation determines the length of a day on that planet. For Earth, it takes approximately 24 hours to complete one full rotation.
One full rotation of the hour hand is 12 hours. One full rotation of the minute hand is an hour
360 degrees
One full rotation is 360 degrees.
One full rotation is 360 degrees.
120 degrees
The length of rotation typically refers to the distance traveled by a point on a rotating object as it completes one full rotation around its axis. It is calculated based on the circumference of the circle traced by the rotating point.
One-sixth
1 second
It is one fifths.
one rotation is one day.
1080 is a trick where you and the bike rotate(like a pirouette) during a jump. one full turn is 360 (degrees of rotation), two full turns are 720 (degrees of rotation) and 1080 is 3 full turns of rotation.
Pluto's rotation period, or a full day-night cycle, is about 6.4 Earth days. This means it takes approximately 6.4 Earth days for Pluto to complete one full rotation on its axis.