why did the earth is rotating
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Earth's graceful 24-hour rotation rate is one of the traits that makes our planet so friendly to life, allowing most parts of Earth to stay a nice, comfortable temperature as they are bathed in sunlight during the day and darkness at night.
Each planet in the solar system has its own unique rotation rate. Tiny Mercury, sizzling closest to the Sun, takes 59 Earth days to turn around just once. Venus, the second planet, rotates once every 243 Earth days. What's more, Venus rotates backwards from the direction of its orbit around the Sun, as do Uranus and tiny dwarf planet Pluto. Uranus even lies down on the job, rolling around with its axis of rotation pointed nearly toward the Sun.
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Each planet in the solar system has its own unique rotation rate. Tiny Mercury, sizzling closest to the Sun, takes 59 Earth days to turn around just once. Venus, the second planet, rotates once every 243 Earth days. What's more, Venus rotates backwards from the direction of its orbit around the Sun, as do Uranus and tiny dwarf planet Pluto. Uranus even lies down on the job, rolling around with its axis of rotation pointed nearly toward the Sun.
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manamperi344:
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hey mate ur ans
almost five billion years ago our solar system was formed.
the earth spins around its axis, making the sunrises and sunsets a daily feature of life on the planet. it has done so since it was formed 4.6 billion years ago.
the earth formed out of a disk of cloud of gas and dust particles that swirled around the new born baby sun and then one day it collapsed due its own weight.
when it collapsed, the gas cloud's rotation sped up and because there isn't much in space to slow things down, it usually keeps going and in this case it had lots of ANGULAR MOMENTUM( objects tendency to keep spinning) and due to the sun's gravitational force also known as centripretal force. as a reault, all the planets likely spun in the same direction when the solar system was formed.
but today however all the planets do not rotate in the same direction.
hope it helps
almost five billion years ago our solar system was formed.
the earth spins around its axis, making the sunrises and sunsets a daily feature of life on the planet. it has done so since it was formed 4.6 billion years ago.
the earth formed out of a disk of cloud of gas and dust particles that swirled around the new born baby sun and then one day it collapsed due its own weight.
when it collapsed, the gas cloud's rotation sped up and because there isn't much in space to slow things down, it usually keeps going and in this case it had lots of ANGULAR MOMENTUM( objects tendency to keep spinning) and due to the sun's gravitational force also known as centripretal force. as a reault, all the planets likely spun in the same direction when the solar system was formed.
but today however all the planets do not rotate in the same direction.
hope it helps
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