A planet rotates on its axis, an imaginary line passing through its center. This rotation causes day and night as different parts of the planet are exposed to sunlight.
Jupiter rotates from west to east, or in a counterclockwise direction, if viewed from above its north pole.
The imaginary line that connects the North Pole to the South Pole at the surface of the planet is called the Earth's axis. It is an imaginary line around which the Earth rotates.
There are actually 2 planets that are different. Venus rotates counter clockwise. (Sun rises in the West on Venus) Neptune is tilted so far over that it rotates on its side. Instead of a North and South pole, it has an East and West pole.
It is the northern most point on Earth. You cannot go west or east of it, so the only direction is south. At the South Pole, you can only go north. The Earth rotates based on the North Pole and South Pole. There is no east or west pole.
A planet rotates on its axis, an imaginary line that runs from its North Pole to its South Pole. This rotation determines the length of a day on the planet.
A planet rotates on its axis, an imaginary line passing through its center. This rotation causes day and night as different parts of the planet are exposed to sunlight.
Jupiter rotates from west to east, or in a counterclockwise direction, if viewed from above its north pole.
An axis of rotation is the axis around which any body rotates, or the line joining the North Pole and the South Pole about which the planet Earth rotates on a daily basis.
The imaginary line that connects the North Pole to the South Pole at the surface of the planet is called the Earth's axis. It is an imaginary line around which the Earth rotates.
A planet's axis is an imaginary line that runs through its center, connecting the North and South Poles. The tilt of this axis is responsible for the changing seasons on the planet as it orbits the sun.
There are actually 2 planets that are different. Venus rotates counter clockwise. (Sun rises in the West on Venus) Neptune is tilted so far over that it rotates on its side. Instead of a North and South pole, it has an East and West pole.
It is the northern most point on Earth. You cannot go west or east of it, so the only direction is south. At the South Pole, you can only go north. The Earth rotates based on the North Pole and South Pole. There is no east or west pole.
I believe that is when the rotation of the planet moves(wobbles) its North-South Axis. Normally a planet will have this axis point in one direction.
The rotation of a planet occurs on an imaginary axis that extends from the planet's north pole to its south pole. This rotational motion on the axis causes the planet to spin, resulting in the cycle of day and night.
The only planet that spends in the opposite direction from the rest is Venus, but at an incredibly slow rate. It takes something like 248 earth days for it to make one complete rotation (in case it's not clear, our earth makes one complete rotation in 1 earth day). No-one actually knows why Venus spins in this opposite direction but it is very interesting because it must have been an absolutely catastrophic event for something so drastic to have happened. Also, amusingly, it was only quite recently that scientists discovered that it rotates retrograde because the thick layer of clouds covering the surface of the planet are rotating in the opposite direction to that of the planet, and thus the same direction as all the other planets, making it look completely normal to anyone without specialist equipment.
Earth rotates on an imaginary axis that runs from the North Pole to the South Pole. This rotation gives rise to day and night cycles.