Horizons What is a negative rotational period?

Interesting comments. Must google some planetary words.

If I stand on the South pole is there a rotational difference to standing on the North pole?
 
It's just a convention. There is no up and down in space.

I don't think so. I think the main body in a system ("sun") serves as reference for a couple of things (e.g. predominant rotation direction, predominant orbital direction, plane of the solar system).
There has to be some kind of convention what defines up and down in this sense. Maybe it's referring to the next big hierarchy and that would be the galaxy?
 
Negative Poles:
bp7.jpg
Positive Poles:
bp6.jpg
 
It can't be (magnetic) north and southpole because they can switch on a stellar body in periods. Also the bodys within a system can have different south (up) and north (down).
This way we would describe the rotational period for planet 1 clockwise and planet 2 counterclockwise even when they move the same way.
I always expected that very close binary stars have north and southpole on the opposite of each other [blah] but i'm not an astronomical man.

I have no idea which reference is used for these stats
 
Interesting comments. Must google some planetary words.

If I stand on the South pole is there a rotational difference to standing on the North pole?

Geographic, magnetic or geomagnetic north pole?

Oh and you do know there are seven south poles right, so make sure you pick one that has a matching striped pole in the north :D

Hang on......was that swallow carrying a coconut? :O
 
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