I think you're picturing yourself on the earth looking out into space, north south east and west are directions from the perspective of looking at land.
If you are facing north and lying on your back the sun will rise on your left side. If you're facing north and lying on your stomach it will rise from your right side.
If that makes sense.
the direction of the earths rotation is right The direction of the earth's rotation is East. There are many other answers depending on the position and orientation of the observer relative to the earth. For example, if the observer is facing the globe from a position above the north pole, the rotation appears to be counter-clockwise. If the observer is facing the globe from a position above the south pole, the rotation appears to be clockwise. If the observer is facing the globe from a position above the equator, the rotation appears to be to the right if the observer is oriented so that North is "up" and south is "down". However, if the observer is "upside down"(a northern hemisphere bias), the rotation appears to be to the left.
It rotates from West to East ( counter-clockwise if you are looking down onto the north pole ). We see that the sun rises from East and sets in West. Actually, the sun does not move but the earth rotates in the opposite direction i.e. from west to east , so it appears as if the sun is moving from east to west.
There are actually 2 planets that are different. Venus rotates counter clockwise. (Sun rises in the West on Venus) Neptune is tilted so far over that it rotates on its side. Instead of a North and South pole, it has an East and West pole.
Te west... It, as do the Sun and planets, rises in the East and sets in the West because of the rotation of the Earth.
The Earth rotates itself as is revolves around the Sun. Earth is said to have a Prograde rotation by only looking at the North pole. Unlike Earth, Venus has a Retrograde rotation. A Prograde rotation is counterclockwise, while a Retrograde rotation is clockwise. So, from Earth, the sun looks like it rises from the East and rests in the West, but on Venus, the sun rises from the West and sets in the East. Apparently, the answer is that Earth itself rotates counterclockwise as it revolves around the sun. (of course the sun doesn't move, nor is the Earth at the center of the galaxy)
When observing from high to the north, the earth rotates anti-clockwise (counter-clockwise), or toward the east. That's why the sun rises in the east. The earth's orbit or revolution is also anti-clockwise.
Counter-clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere, and clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere.
The sun rises in the east due to the stationary position of the sun, and the relative position of the Earth. If the Earth's axis is considered up, then, when looking down at the North Pole, the Earth is spinning counter-clockwise.
east to west < wrong! the sun rises in the East and sets in the West because the earth spins the opposite way. Think about it. Well the earth spins counter-clockwise, so the sun will rise in the East and set in the West because of the rotation its spinning in.
the direction of the earths rotation is right The direction of the earth's rotation is East. There are many other answers depending on the position and orientation of the observer relative to the earth. For example, if the observer is facing the globe from a position above the north pole, the rotation appears to be counter-clockwise. If the observer is facing the globe from a position above the south pole, the rotation appears to be clockwise. If the observer is facing the globe from a position above the equator, the rotation appears to be to the right if the observer is oriented so that North is "up" and south is "down". However, if the observer is "upside down"(a northern hemisphere bias), the rotation appears to be to the left.
they explain everything that happened on earth, like in most myths. Like the weather or why sun rises and the seasons.
The Earth revolves (orbits) counter-clockwise around the Sun as viewed from above the North Pole. The Earth rotates (spins) on its axis counter-clockwise as well. The Moon also revolves around the Earth counter-clockwise.In general (there are a few exceptions) all the material that formed the Solar system revolved around the Sun in a counter-clockwise direction due to the conservation of angular momentum when the material contracted to form the planetary disk.ExceptionsThe planet Venus has somehow been reversed in its spin, and now spins very slowly clockwise on its axis as observed from the arbitrary north.Some moons of large planets such as Jupiter are captured asteroids and may orbit in clockwise (retrograde) orbits.
Yes.The Sun apparently moves across the sky every day because of the Earth's rotation. It rises towards the East then later it sets towards the West.Earth's rotation is the rotation of the solid Earth around its own axis. The Earth rotates from the west towards the east. As viewed from the North Star or polestar Polaris, the Earth turns counter-clockwise.
Venus rotates in the opposite direction to the Earth. The Sun rises in the West and sets in the East. Of course you couldn't see this from the planet's surface because of the atmosphere. Also the rotation is very slow at about 243 Earth days in length.
Every point on the earth moves toward the east. If you're hanging over the north pole looking down, you see the earth spinning counter-clockwise (to your left). If you're hanging over the south pole looking down, you see the earth spinning clockwise (to your right). We have deduced this from the observation that the Sun rises in the East and travels toward the West. Since we assume that the Sun is relatively stationary (thanks to the assertions of Copernicus and others), we surmise that it is our frame of reference that is changing.
It rotates from West to East ( counter-clockwise if you are looking down onto the north pole ). We see that the sun rises from East and sets in West. Actually, the sun does not move but the earth rotates in the opposite direction i.e. from west to east , so it appears as if the sun is moving from east to west.
There are actually 2 planets that are different. Venus rotates counter clockwise. (Sun rises in the West on Venus) Neptune is tilted so far over that it rotates on its side. Instead of a North and South pole, it has an East and West pole.