Clockwise.
As viewed from the galactic north, the Sun orbits in a clockwise motion
We orbit the Milky Way galaxy in a counter-clockwise direction when viewed from above the galactic plane. This orbital motion takes hundreds of millions of years to complete one full orbit around the center of the Milky Way.
it revolves around the galactic center
No, stars revolve around the galactic center.
The galactic center is somewhere in the neighbourhood of 24 - 26000 light years (around 7600 parsecs)
The galactic core is the center (not the very center) of the Milky Way Galaxy.
It would blow from the mass of high pressure to the mass of low pressure.Answer 2Looking down from a satellite, the northern hemisphere high pressure systems move in a clockwise direction and anticlockwise in the southern hemisphere.Low pressure systems are the reverse of these, IE clockwise in the southern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the northern hemisphere.
The galactic center is somewhere in the neighbourhood of 24 - 26,000 light years (around 7,600 parsecs) from Earth.
One galactic rotation at our distance from the galactic center takes about 220 million years.
A galactic centre.A galactic centre.A galactic centre.A galactic centre.
The galactic center.
Yes, there's a galactic alignment every year. As the earth goes around the sun, at one point the earth, sun, and the center of the galaxy line up.