168 hours, Seven days - or one week !
Technically, that's only true with respect to the Sun. With respect to the fixed stars, it's about 7 * (23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 seconds).
apparently, it is called catenoid.
Yes, the axis of the Earth passes through its centre.
No. 30 seconds is always half a minute. However, on other planets, since they rotate at different speeds, time is counted differently to how it would be on Earth. (If one rotation on the planet's axis is "a day", but they rotate quicker than the Earth does, a minute will be fewer seconds that it would be on Earth). You may find a planet where 30 seconds = a minute, however I don't know which one that could be off hand.
Earth's axis is tilted to about 11 degrees from the vertical.
A straight line that a body rotates around is known as the axis of rotation. This line serves as the pivot point about which the body moves, allowing it to rotate in a circular motion. The axis can be internal, like the rotation of the Earth around its axis, or external, such as a spinning top rotating around a point on its surface. The orientation and position of the axis significantly influence the motion and stability of the rotating body.
It takes approximately 168 hours, or 7 days, for the Earth to rotate around its axis seven times. This is equivalent to one week of time.
Yes the Earth does rotate on an axis.
Earth will rotate on its axis approximately 31 times in May 2026, as there are typically 31 days in May.
Yes, the Earth does rotate on its axis.
How does the earth rotate on its axis??it rotates on
axis
inersia
Yes.
The Earth rotates on its axis and revolves around the sun.
its rotation takes about 243 Earth days to rotate on its axis
There are 31 days in August.
360 degrees per 24 hours.