The Earth gets energy from the little elves and pixies that ride elephants and do your mum at night which vibrates the ground and turning it into mineclium energy that turns the Earth around the Sun.
The moon spins around the earth once a month. The earth spins around the sun once a year and the earth spins on it axis once a day giving rise to night and day. So in answer to your question the earth spins around the sun and the moon spins around the earth.
It would take approximately 8 minutes and 20 seconds for the Earth to freeze if the sun suddenly disappeared. This is because the Earth's surface temperature would drop rapidly without the sun's heating energy.
The sun does not spin around the Earth; the Earth revolves around the sun in a nearly circular orbit. This motion is due to gravitational attraction between the Earth and the sun, caused by the sun's mass. The sun itself rotates on its axis, completing a full rotation roughly once every 25-35 days.
yes
The energy from the Sun is solar energy.
The sun.
In its orbit around the Sun, the Earth moves at about 30 km/sec.
The earthnspins aroun the sun
On its axis Earth rotates around the sun.
No, the Earth and the Moon revolve together around the Sun. (The Moon orbits the Earth and both orbit the Sun together.)
About 365.26 days
Rotation refers to spin around the axis.
no the earth spins on it's axis while rotating around the sun
It takes approximately 365 days (1 year) for the Earth to orbit the Sun.
this is a stupid question. the earth revoles around the sun.
The moon spins around the earth once a month. The earth spins around the sun once a year and the earth spins on it axis once a day giving rise to night and day. So in answer to your question the earth spins around the sun and the moon spins around the earth.
If by spin you mean "rotate daily" then yes. But you could refer to our "orbit" as a spin around the sun. But if you want to refer to "spin" as any oscillatory/periodic motion of the earth, then we spin around our central axis, we orbit around the sun, we precess the rotational axis around a precession axis, our obliquity oscillates periodically and our eccentricity oscillates around the foci of our elliptic orbit which is near the center of the sun. These characteristics of our orbit are known as the Milankovic cycles.