The earth has arranged to revolve around the sun once a year and rotate on its axis once a day.
It takes Mars 24 hours 37 mins 23 seconds (Earth time) to rotate once on its axis. That is its sidereal rotation period, relative to the far distant stars.
The period of revolution of Mars around the Sun is about 687 Earth days.The period of rotation about its axis is about 24 hours, 37 minutes, and 23 seconds.
Not sure if you mean rotate or revolve, but I'll give you both. The sun rotates on it's axis once every 25 days. The sun revolves around the center of the Milky Way galaxy once every 225,000 years, give-or-take.
Mars rotates on its axis once every 24.6 hours, which is about 3% longer than Earth's rotation period. This means that a day on Mars, known as a "sol," is almost the same length as a day on Earth.
88 days to revolve and to rotate on its axis 56.8 days
Yes it does. It takes 25.05 earth days to revolve on its axis once.
Mars does NOT revolve around the Earth !.. It revolves around the SUN... taking 687 days to orbit the sun once.
The earth has arranged to revolve around the sun once a year and rotate on its axis once a day.
In this case the word is "revolve". "Rotate" is used for an object that turns around an axis within itself. Saturn takes about 29.5 years to revolve once around the Sun.
Mars. Mars rotates once in about 1.026 Earth days.Mars.
it takes mars 24.6 hours to rotate on its axis once
Mars takes about 24 hours and 39 minutes to rotate.
on mars it is 1058 days a year! According to NASA, Mars orbits the sun once every 686 Earth days (1.881 Earth days). http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/allison_02/ Mars makes one revolution on its axis every 24 hours and 39 min. (Earth time), a Mars "day" is referred to as "one sol." A person on Mars would complete one Mars year in 668 sols. The giss.nasa.gov URL above has a good explanation of Mars time. it takes mars... 186 days to rotate and 12 years to revolve around the sun.
The "day" on Mars, the time it takes for one complete rotation, is about 24.62 Earth hours.
There is no diffinitive answer of what 'axis' means however Mussolini once said that Italy and Germany would make an axis which all European States would revolve round.
Mars takes about 24.6 hours to complete one full rotation on its axis, which is slightly longer than an Earth day.