it is approximately in my thought as earth spins and revolving around the sun the ball just spinS. there is also another matter it is not like a ball spins i dont know there is something
In fact, recent research does indeed suggest that the inner core rotates Eastward faster than the rest of the planet.
Also, the outer core may rotate in the opposite direction, to the West.
Yes! It does. It actually moves faster than the Earth it self.
It was found by Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory that the Earth's core rotates in the same direction as the Earth but makes its rotation 2/3 of a second faster than the planet.
yes. 100 rotations per second, and it holds the universe together.
Yes
That's the idea that Earth is in the center, and other objects move in complicated paths around Earth.
convection currents
The core is considered the center of Earth because it is at Earth's geometric center.
he found this impossible because when he made his telescope he saw that the earth move around the sun. this theory is call heliocentric, helio meens the sun and centric meens the center.
In the center of the Earth. Where did you THINK it was?
Towards the center of the Earth.
gravity
The Earth and moon revolve around their mutual center of mass every 27.32 days.
if four horses with equal power are pulling one from opposite sides, it will not move. means net force would be zero. same is at center of earth. the mass of earth around center attracts equally to all sides( because geometrical center and center of mass are same). so net force is zero. On the other hand if you think of gravity as a force puling you into the centre of the earth then when you are at the center of the earth gravity must be zeero
That's the idea that Earth is in the center, and other objects move in complicated paths around Earth.
They move because they are both gravitationally bound. The Sun is bound to the Milky Way Galaxy and the Earth is bound to the Sun. Another way to put it is that they revolve around each others common center of gravity. What this mean is that, in the case of the Earth, it is falling toward the Sun's center of gravity but for every foot the Earth moves toward the Sun's center, the Sun moves a foot out of the way. The Sun is moving because it is falling toward the center of our galaxy. Again, it would make it to the center of our galaxy but for one reason. Our galaxy is moving toward the center of the Virgo Super Cluster.
Both the Earth and the Moon move in the universe. Earth and Moon actually orbit their common center of mass. Together, the Earth and the Moon orbit the Sun, which itself is moving in the universe.
convection currents
You would have to double your distance from the center of the earth, or about 4,000 miles off the surface.
Imagine that there is only the Sun and the Earth (forgetting about the other planets, for simplicity). Actually Earth wouldn't move around the Sun, but both move around their common center of mass. The Sun being 333,000 times more massive, this center of mass is that much closer to the Sun's center. "The Sun moving around Earth", or to be more accurate, having both move to a point that is closer to the Earth, is impossible, unless their masses changed - it would violate all sorts of physical laws; for a start, Newton's Laws of Motion, and the Law of Conservation of Momentum.
All stars move in orbit around the center of the Milky Way, so you consider it "moving", but visually on Earth your just seeing Gemini changing positions due to the rotation and orbit of the Earth.
The core is considered the center of Earth because it is at Earth's geometric center.