Since everyone and everything on Earth does so anyway, nothing.
The speed of rotation is greatest at the equator; 1038 miles per hour.
No.
The speed of Earth's rotation on its axis determines the length of a day. A faster rotation results in shorter days, while a slower rotation results in longer days.
Skyscrapers have a negligible impact on the Earth's rotation. Their size and mass are not significant enough to affect the Earth's rotation speed or axis. Other factors like earthquakes, glaciers melting, and ocean currents play a much larger role in influencing the Earth's rotation.
If you are at exactly the north or south pole the measurement is in Revolutions per Day And that speed is 1 Revolution Per Day.
The rockets are launched easterly and get the benefit of of the speed of the earths rotation and there is the entire Atlantic Ocean for safety.
That depends, in what direction it is moving initially, and at what speed. Inertia is the tendency to MAINTAIN a velocity.
Everything else is moving along with you. You don't really notice much movement when you're taking an airplane trip unless you're landing or taking off; the earth's rotation is similar.
counter to the earth's rotation Exactly wrong..........it travels WITH the Earths rotation.....eastwards
No. Just the opposite. The earth's rotation is slowing down because of the gravitational force between the earth and the moon. The day is getting longer by something like a millisecond (0.001 second) every hundred years.
i don't think anyone really knows that really unless your an extreme scientist and if you are than will u PLEASE help me with my science work?! =P
If the Moon's rotation speed were half as fast as it is now, each lunar day would be twice as long. This would affect the Moon's gravitational pull on Earth, leading to changes in tides and potentially impacting ecosystems that rely on tidal rhythms.