Zero; the Sun doesn't go around the Earth at all. The Earth goes around the Sun once in a year. The year is DEFINED as the time it takes for the Earth to go around the Sun once.
But Albert Einstein demonstrated that all things are relative, and that each relative viewpoint is in some sense valid. There are a number of perspectives in which viewing the Earth as stationary and the Sun as moving makes sense. In that frame of reference, the Sun goes around the Earth 365 and a quarter times in a "year". However, in this frame of reference there is no logical definition of "year", so perhaps that's not the right answer.
Wiki User
∙ 9y agoWiki User
∙ 15y agoThe Sun does not rotate around the Earth, the Earth orbits the Sun.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoIF you're referring to the moon, then 13.
Earth has about 50 times the volume of the Moon (and 81 times the mass of the Moon).
18.666 times
The concept that the Earth is round dates back to ancient times. Evidence supporting this idea includes observations of the Earth's shadow on the moon during an eclipse, the changing position of stars in the sky as one moves north or south, and the ability to see ships gradually disappear over the horizon.
6
99000 times lighter than earth.
Earth orbited the sun about ...... times a year!
127 times
once a year... -_-
Earth has about 50 times the volume of the Moon (and 81 times the mass of the Moon).
twice
The moon orbits around the Earth approximately once every 27.3 days. This period is known as a synodic month or lunar month.
4 goes into 174 43.5 times, or 43 if you round to the nearest whole.
You could circle the earth at the equator 261 times, approximately.
Other way round 8 goes into 144 a total of 18 times
The sun does not go around anything. It stays relatively stationary in the center of our solar system while the planets orbit around it. This is known as heliocentrism, which was proposed by Nicolaus Copernicus in the 16th century.
Scientists of Hellenistic times believed the Earth was the center of the universe and that celestial bodies moved around it in perfect circular motion. In Columbus's time, scientists began to challenge this geocentric view, with Copernicus proposing a heliocentric model where the Earth orbits the Sun. This shift in thinking laid the foundation for the scientific revolution that followed.
It would depend on the font and size of the "0".