On Earth, the direction is east to west.
In order to move from Antarctica to Africa -- or to any other continent on earth -- your direction is north.
It will be blue shifted
Obviously. Since they move in an ellipse around the Earth (or other central body), they change direction all the time. The only way NOT to change direction would be to move in a straight line; satellites don't do that.
In what direction did the tropical cyclone move?
The earth's plates move in all directions: up, down, and sideways. That's why we have mountains and subsidances and earthquakes and volcanoes and all sorts of stuff!
In order to move from Antarctica to Africa -- or to any other continent on earth -- your direction is north.
the earth
Viewed from above the north pole, anticlockwise is the direction of spin.
it travels west to east
because the earth moves(:
S Waves
THE CONSTELLATIONS DON'T MOVE. THE EARTH DOES AND THAT IS WHY WE HUMANS THINK IT'S MOVING WHEN THEY ARE NOT.
In the southern hemisphere, ocean currents generally move clockwise due to the Coriolis effect, which is the result of Earth's rotation. This means that currents tend to move to the left in the southern hemisphere. However, specific ocean currents may have variations in their flow direction based on local topography and wind patterns.
It will be blue shifted
it depends where on the earth you are standing
Coriolis force
Day and night, plus the seasons. The rotational direction of cyclones.