Which planet orbits anticlockwise




















Venus is observed to rotate in a clockwise manner. Below is a review of the planet Venus, and the probable reasons as to why it does not rotate in the same direction as the other planets in the Solar System.

Venus is the second planet from the sun after mercury. The planet is named in honor of the Roman goddess of love and beauty, probably because it is usually very bright. In fact, it is one of the brightest celestial bodies on the sky. For this reason, it is either referred to as the morning star or the evening star. Venus does not have any natural satellites.

Venus and Earth are said to be sister planets because they are both terrestrial planets, their sizes are almost the same, and they are also close to one another.

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A chronicle of the first steps on the Moon , and what it took to get there. The Magazine News Observing. Photos Videos Blogs Community Shop. Sign up! Follow us: Facebook Twitter. It rotates backwards compared to the Earth and the other planets. Well not all, since Uranus also rotates in a different way. If you look at the solar system from its north pole, then you will see all the planets orbiting the Sun counter clockwise and rotating on their axis counterclockwise, except for Venus and Uranus.

Venus rotates clockwise while Uranus rolls on its side as it orbits the Sun. At that time, all the planets rotated in the same direction. But something came along that changed the rotational direction of Venus and Uranus. Lets start with Venus. There are a few possibilities that we can take into account to explain why Venus rotates backwards. Venus is initially rotating counterclockwise like the other planets and it still does. In other words, it spins in the same direction it always has, just upside down, so that looking at it from the other planets makes the spin look backward.

As I said before, there are a few explanations for this. Such strong tides could have caused the flip to happen. Another explanation comes from the cratering evidence on each planet.

Soon after the planets were formed, there still were many large and small objects or maybe we can classify them as mini planets that orbited the Sun. Well if Venus was rotating upside down then.. Most planetary axes are perpendicular to the orbital plane. Uranus rotates about an axis that is nearly parallel with its orbital plane i.

These oddities are thought to be caused by events, such as collisions, which occurred during the formation of the solar system. Jeff Mangum.



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