As viewed from the Moon, the Earth doesn't move much; it "wobbles" a little in the sky. The Moon is tidally locked to the Earth, with the same side of the Moon pointing at the Earth. The "wobble" is due to the Moon's elliptical orbit around the Earth; the Moon is moving faster in its orbit at perigee than at apogee, and the appearance is that the Earth moves a little back and forth in the lunar skies.
I'll give you 1008 hours=144 days Hahahahahaha, Earth does not have a 7 hour day. The correct answer is: 1008 hours = 42 days = 6 weeks.
3045
It depends on the distance from earth and the mass of the satellite. If close, like the international space station, it could orbit every two hours or so. If far out then it may take 24 hours. If very far out, like the moon, it could take several weeks.
about 24 hours every 1 to 2 weeks
Because the moon rotates on an axis, causing every point on its surface to experience roughly two weeks of daylight followed by two weeks of darkness, as the rotation carries every point toward and then away from the sun. Actually pretty much the same thing that happens on Earth every 24 hours.
It dosen't. It takes 365 DAYS for the EArth to orbit the sun.
2080. (40 hours a week x 52 weeks in a year)
I don't know about the hours, but what I know is that it is stricted to once every two weeks.
Passes every 6 weeks
For any specific place on Earth, it depends on the season and latitude. Locations on the equator receive 12 hours of daylight per day, consistently. The poles on the other hand have weeks with no sunlight at all (in winter) and weeks with no night (in summer).
2,000
$900