If you ask how, it spins in circles. It turns fully in about one month, I believe:)
About 1 second away every 50,000 years
Ahem, that is wrong. There are 365 1/4 days every year on Earth. That is the cause of the leap year every four years.
Mercury orbits the sun once every 88 days, so a 'Mercurian year' is about three months long. For every one Earth year, you will have just over 4 'Mercurian years'.
Earth rotates roughly 365 and 1/4 times in a year, the extra 1/4 results in an extra day every 4 years, or a "leap year".
1-2 yards
it doesnt the moon is drifting away from earth's gravitational pull by 1 half an inch every year
The curvature of the Earth is approximately 0.13% per kilometer (1 km). This means that for every 1 km you move along the surface of the Earth, the curvature causes a vertical drop of about 0.13% of that distance.
Every new year, earth complete almost one solar orbit. In every 4 year, it will need to add 1 extra day to compensate this minor difference in earth rotation period with solar orbit.
1 meter = 100 cm 7 meter = 700 cm 7 cm for 1 year and 14 cm for years 100 x 1 year = 100 year So 7m/100yr. But this is not 'steady.' Like universe, the Earth also has acceleration in moving. So it is not always 7 cm per year. It maybe 4cm per year depending on the 'what plate.'
One year........ + 1 day for leap year!
It would be colder and the year would be longer by 1.5% for every 1% that the Earth was further away.
sun=0% because the sun does not move earth=365 days=1 year=100%