the usual
Uranus and Venus rotate east to west.
I'm not sure of what you mean but I think you got it right. Another way to describe it is if you are North of Earth, out in space, looking back, you would see Earth rotate counter-clockwise. If you were out in space from the South side of our planet Earth, you would see the Earth rotate clockwise.
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.
Venus and Uranus are the planets which rotate from East to West.
The moon revolves from west to east, completing an entire revolution in 27.32 days.
axis
west to east
The Earth rotates towards the east. Or, if you were looking down on it from above the North Pole, it would rotate counter-clockwise.
Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune are the only planets which rotate from west to east
Uranus and Venus rotate east to west.
I'm not sure of what you mean but I think you got it right. Another way to describe it is if you are North of Earth, out in space, looking back, you would see Earth rotate counter-clockwise. If you were out in space from the South side of our planet Earth, you would see the Earth rotate clockwise.
The Moon doesn't rotate. It does orbit the Earth, while the Earth orbits the Sun, but the same side of the moon is shown to the Earth at all times. Where did you get the figure 13.8 degrees east?
Earth's rotation is East according to the globe.
The Earth ALWAYS rotates from west to east, and completes one rotation in about 24 hours.
Well, if you think about it, one is a consequence of the other. If you lie down on the ground and rotate (roll) west to east, everything around you that isn't moving will appear to you to rotate east to west (left to right if your head is pointing north).
The Earth would rotate diagonally.
from west to eats