The speed of the rotation of the Earth is, at the equator, about 1040 miles per hour. It decreases as you go north or south, and you can approximate this speed as Cosine(Latitude)*1040. Basically, if you fly a passenger jet from New York to San Francisco, you're just about standing still while the Earth turns beneath you.
The Earth moving in its orbit goes about 67,000 miles per hour; a little faster in January at perihelion, and a little slower in July, at aphelion.
The earths rotation effects whether it is night or day (so you'll see the moon at night).
Coriolis effect
buy its rotation of the earth .its the temperature
Because of the rotation the earth faces the sun at daytime but when it rotates again it faces away which makes night.
day and night occer
It's called Coriolis force.
It's called Coriolis force.
The Coriolis effect is the phenomenon that causes objects to be deflected in a curved path due to the rotation of the Earth. It influences the movement of air masses, ocean currents, and objects over long distances, leading to patterns such as the rotation of hurricanes and the direction of ocean currents.
rotation
No. Earth orbits the sun, not the other way around. Earth's orbit depends on the mass of the sun, not Earth's rotation. Earth's rotation does, however, give the appearance that celestial objects revolve around it.
24 hours rotation
That's "rotation".
because of the earths rotation
no they are not
coriolis effect
The Coriolis effect is the phenomenon that causes objects to move in a curved path due to the rotation of the Earth. It deflects moving objects to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. This effect is responsible for the rotation of large-scale weather systems like hurricanes and typhoons.
Earth's rotation causes a centrifugal force that slightly counteracts gravity at the equator, making objects slightly lighter there compared to the poles. This effect is very small, however, and does not significantly impact our daily lives or activities.