Rotation period

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In astronomy, a rotation period is the time an astronomical object takes to complete one revolution around its rotation axis.

Contents

[edit] Measuring Rotation

For solid objects, such as rocky planets and asteroids, the rotation period is a single value. For gaseous/fluid bodies, such as stars and gas giant planets, the period of rotation varies from the equator to the poles due to a phenomenon called differential rotation. Typically, the stated rotation period for a gas giant (ie, Jupiter) is the internal rotation period, as determined from the rotation of the planet's magnetic field. For objects that are not spherically symmetrical, the rotation period is in general not fixed, even in the absence of gravitational or tidal forces. This is because, although the rotation axis is fixed in space (by the conservation of angular momentum), it is not necessarily fixed in the body of the object itself. The moment of inertia of the object around the rotation axis can therefore vary, and hence the rate of rotation can vary (because the product of the moment of inertia and the rate of rotation is equal to the angular momentum, which is fixed). Hyperion, a satellite of Saturn, exhibits this behaviour, and its rotation period is described as chaotic.

[edit] Rotation period of selected objects

Planet Rotation Period
Sun 25 days 9 hours 7 minutes 13 seconds (25.38 days) (equator), about 35 days near the poles
Mercury 58 days 15.5088 hours (58.6462 days)
Venus 243.0185 days
Earth 0.997 270 days (23.934 47 h or 86 164 seconds)
Earth's Moon 27.321 661 days (synchronous)
Mars 24.622 962 hours (1.025 957 days)
Jupiter 9 hours 55 minutes 29.685 seconds (0.413 538 021 days)
Saturn 10 hours 39 minutes 22.4 seconds (0.444 009 259 2 days)
Uranus 17 hours 14 minutes 24 seconds (0.718 333 333 days)
Neptune 16 hours 6 minutes 36 seconds (0.671 250 00 days)
Pluto 6 days 9 hours 17.6 minutes (6.387 days) Eirs

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

MIRA. Jupiter. Retrieved on May 24, 2005.