If you "stand" above the North Pole and look down it will appear to turn anti-clockwise. Looking at it from above the equator, it appears to turn from left to right.
If you were hanging up above the north pole, looking down at the earth, you would see
the earth spinning counterclockwise, right to left, west to east.
it would still appear to rotate
because or the gravity of the moon and earth
same as earth
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 sun does rotate on its axis, but not exactly the way the Earth does, because the sun is made of gas, and different sections of it rotate at different speeds.
Yes, but it rotates the opposite way of earth
from west to eats
Yes the Earth does rotate on an axis.
I dont rotate comparatively with the earth but as Im standing on it I do rotate with it becaus I am part of it.
because if the earth didnt rotate it didnt cause day and night
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.
That's just the way it is!
The ocean and the earth do rotate. At the same speed, once every 24 hrs.
Yes, the Earth does rotate on its axis.
24 hoursBy Johana Ortiz
In the Northern Hemisphere, typhoons rotate counterclockwise. In the Southern Hemisphere, they rotate clockwise. This rotation is due to the Coriolis effect caused by the Earth's rotation.
The sun does not rotate. The earth rotates