the sun appears to travel east to west also known as ew
east 2 west
West. This is due to Earth's rotation from west to east, causing the sun to appear to move across the sky and set in the western direction.
All the planets do orbit the sun in the same direction. However, as we orbit the sun quicker than the planets further out from us, and slower than the ones inside us they do at times appear to be moving the other direction.
the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. by leanne marriott x
Since Earth's surface is rotating toward the east, "fixed" celestial bodies appear to be moving toward the west.
east 2 west
The sun appears to move generally from east to west daily due to the rotation of the earth as it revolves around the sun.
Just like the Sun and the Moon, stars appear to move towards the west. The reason is that Earth rotates in the opposite direction - towards the east.
West. This is due to Earth's rotation from west to east, causing the sun to appear to move across the sky and set in the western direction.
No
All the planets do orbit the sun in the same direction. However, as we orbit the sun quicker than the planets further out from us, and slower than the ones inside us they do at times appear to be moving the other direction.
The object appears to move up and away from you as you shift the stage toward you in a microscope.
no
the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. by leanne marriott x
Since Earth's surface is rotating toward the east, "fixed" celestial bodies appear to be moving toward the west.
The same way as the rest of the world... Think of two balls, one stationary, one moving. The moving is the Earth, and the stationary is the Sun. Hold the balls up. Rotate one, and hold the other still. As you can see, the Sun will appear on the same side, from east to west.
No, planets in our solar system all orbit the Sun in the same counterclockwise direction as the Sun rotates on its axis.