Rotation of picture
The Galaxy S II is a great phone for taking pictures and uploading them. It has excellent picture quality and pictures can be easily uploaded to most social media sites within a few seconds.
Two of the most talked-about smartphones right now apart from the iPhone5 are Samsung's Galaxy S2 and the Motorola Droid Bionic Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II MORE PICTURES. Galaxy S II vs. Galaxy S Plus vs. Optimus 2X: Head to head revisited ... Samsung Galaxy S 2 Attain for AT&T
Two of the most talked-about smartphones right now apart from the iPhone5 are Samsung's Galaxy S2 and the Motorola Droid Bionic Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II MORE PICTURES. Galaxy S II vs. Galaxy S Plus vs. Optimus 2X: Head to head revisited ... Samsung Galaxy S 2 Attain for AT&T
The Galaxy S II is a great phone for taking pictures and uploading them. It has excellent picture quality and pictures can be easily uploaded to most social media sites within a few seconds.
The Sun, all its planets and the galaxy in which the Sun sits all rotate.
Two of the most talked-about smartphones right now apart from the iPhone5 are Samsung's Galaxy S2 and the Motorola Droid Bionic Samsung I9100 Galaxy S II MORE PICTURES. Galaxy S II vs. Galaxy S Plus vs. Optimus 2X: Head to head revisited ... Samsung Galaxy S 2 Attain for AT&T
Yes, in fact everything in the universe rotates.
I personally like it. The camera takes awesome pictures, and the new swipe motion for messaging is great.
Obviously. All galaxies must rotate - otherwise, they would collapse due to their own gravity.
It does. It rotates about its axis and revolves around the galaxy.
Satilights take pictures of the galaxy, and scientists make hypothesizes.
The Milky Way galaxy is in a local group of 30 or more galaxies of which M30 or Andromeda and the Milkyway are the most massive and they center to a point somewhere between each other. Each have their own satelite galaxies that rotate with the major spiral dominant galaxy