counterclockwise
shut you @#!*% @#!*% up
Phobos rises in the west and sets in the east.
No planets orbit around Mars. There are two moons that orbit around Mars.
Phobos orbits Mars in a close-in, nearly circular orbit that is closer to Mars than any other moon is to its planet in the solar system. It moves in a westward (retrograde) motion compared to the rotation of Mars, rising in the west and setting in the east.
Seen from a vantage point over the "north pole" of the Sun, all the planets in our solar system orbit in an anti-clockwise direction.
Earth's orbit is closer to the sun than Mars' orbit. Earth takes about 365 days to orbit the sun while Mars takes about 687 days. Additionally, Mars has a more elliptical orbit compared to Earth's nearly circular orbit.
You can't give a definative direction as such as the Earth spins on its axis and also orbits the Sun, as does Mars, so their relative positions to each other alter. Mars is further away from the Sun than Earth.
The motion in which Mars appears to reverse its normal direction of motion in the sky is called retrograde motion. This phenomenon occurs when Earth, which moves faster in its orbit, overtakes Mars and creates the illusion that Mars is moving backwards in the sky for a brief period of time.
Yes. Earth is closer to the Sun than Mars, so it will have a smaller orbit.
No. Comets orbit the sun. Many asteroids orbit the sun in between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
From the Earth, the planet Mars appears to backtrack across the sky, against the background stars, over several nights (10 weeks or so) before resuming its normal direction. This apparent retrograde motion is caused by the positioning of the planets Mars and Earth, as Earth passes by Mars (travelling more quickly than Mars due to its closer proximity to the sun). Mars does not actually back track, its orbit remains constant and in the same direction, as with the earth. It only appears to backtrack from observations on Earth as the point of view changes.
Diemos, the smaller of the two moons of Mars, takes 30.3 hours to make one orbit of Mars.