Well, isn't that just the most lovely question! You see, everything in our Milky Way galaxy spins peacefully like a gentle dance in the meadow. The Milky Way itself also gracefully twirls through space at a speed of about 220 kilometers per second. Just take a moment to appreciate the beauty of it all. Everything is right where it should be.
the sun does not rotate around itself, but the earth takes 365.25 days to make one revolution around the sun.
Venus and Uranus are the two planets in our solar system that rotate from east to west, which is known as retrograde rotation. Most planets, including Earth, rotate from west to east.
Actually I dont know, but I guess the rate of everything happeningnow would be twice as fast.
Venus & Uranus rotate in what is called retrograde motion. Retrograde motion is from east to west. All of the other planets including earth rotate from west to east.
Depends on your perspective, doesn't it? Having said that, if you're looking at our galaxy from a "top" view (i.e. down towards the Earth's north pole), then Mars, like everything else in the galaxy, revolves around the Sun in a counter-clockwise direction.
Yes, in fact everything in the universe rotates.
No. If a galaxy were not to rotate, it would soon collapse upon itself, due to its own gravitation.
biggest to smallest : universe, galaxy, star/solar system, planet, moon. The Universe is everything that exists and a galaxy is a cluster of billions of stars and then planets rotate around stars and moons rotate around planets.
Everything in the universe (including the moon) has rotational momentum, causing rotation.
Rotation of picture
The Sun, all its planets and the galaxy in which the Sun sits all rotate.
The inner parts of the galaxy rotate faster than the outer parts. No structure that big could maintain itself with that type of forces - it would simply break apart.
Obviously. All galaxies must rotate - otherwise, they would collapse due to their own gravity.
It does. It rotates about its axis and revolves around the galaxy.
No, the atmosphere does not rotate with the Earth. The Earth's rotation causes the atmosphere to move with it, but the atmosphere itself does not rotate independently.
The Milky Way galaxy is in a local group of 30 or more galaxies of which M30 or Andromeda and the Milkyway are the most massive and they center to a point somewhere between each other. Each have their own satelite galaxies that rotate with the major spiral dominant galaxy
About 220 km/sec.