The Earth spins counterclockwise so no, it spins from west to east.
Counter clockwise if you are standing on the north pole. Clockwise if you stand on the south pole. Either way it spins from west to east.
Because Venus spins west to east unlike Earth which spins east to west.
Because Venus spins west to east unlike Earth which spins east to west.
The Earth spins counterclockwise so no, it spins from west to east. Counter clockwise if you are standing on the north pole. Clockwise if you stand on the south pole. Either way it spins from west to east.
Because the earth spins on its axis from west to east and the sun, hardly moving relative to the earth, appears to move from east to west.
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.
its how the earth spins round the sun. Anonymous.
Jupiter spins from West to East.
There really isn't one. But, Uranus rotates on its side. It still rotates in the same direction, just on its side.
It is due to the rotation of the Earth. The Sun is basically standing still, but you are on a planet that spins.
That answer depends on perspective. It moves from west to east.
The sun sets in the west due to the Earth's rotation from west to east. This daily phenomenon occurs as the Earth spins on its axis, causing the sun to disappear below the horizon in the evening.
The Sun, Moon and stars only appear to "rise" and "set" because we live on a spinning Earth. The Earth spins west-to-east once every 24 hours.