Physics, asked by PremMonotra, 11 months ago

How all the planets rotate.

Answers

Answered by Aayupas
0
All the planets rotate in their own axis
Answered by chino43
5
Planets form from material in this disk, through accretion of smaller particles. In our solar system, the giant gasplanets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) spin more rapidly on their axes than the inner planets do and possess most of the system's angular
momentum.
Every planet in our solar system except for Venus and Uranus rotates counter-clockwise as seen from above the North Pole; that is to say, from west to east. This is the same direction in which all the planets orbit the sun. Uranus was likely hit by a very large planetoid early in its history, causing it to rotate "on its side," 90 degrees away from its orbital motion. Venus rotates backwards compared to the other planets, also likely due to an early asteroid hit which disturbed its original rotation.
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PremMonotra: Thanks elder sister but i thin k they all are magnetic fields on them when the sun is huge of by some of magnetic properties it rotates
Aayupas: my is correct
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