If you mean earth spins in its?
Then the answer is Earth spins on its axis, while also orbiting the Sun.
The imaginary line that the Earth spins on is called the axis.
All but one planet in our solar-system spins clockwise, that is venus. All other spins counter-clockwise or cyclonically. The Sun also spins Cyclonically, so the Earth spins in the same direction as the Sun.
Yes, the Earth's core spins within the planet.
It depends on what latitude you are at but the equatorial rotational speed is 1,670.5 km/hr
magnetic field. The rotation of the liquid outer core of the Earth generates electric currents and in turn creates a magnetic field. This field is what protects our planet from harmful solar radiation and cosmic particles.
the earth spins on an axis, which is carried over by conservation of angular momentum when the earth was created
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.
Earth spins around its axis? Which is the line between the north and south pole.
The Earth spins on an axis.
The Earth's rotation
The imaginary line that the Earth spins on is called the axis.
The imaginary line between the poles of the Earth around which the Earth spins is called the "axis of rotation".
when the earth spins dumbshit
doesnt it spins everyday it spins 1 complete spin
The Earth spins counterclockwise so no, it spins from west to east. Counter clockwise if you are standing on the north pole. Clockwise if you stand on the south pole. Either way it spins from west to east.
The imaginary line between the poles of the Earth around which the Earth spins is called the "axis of rotation".
The Earth spins like a top around its own axis. The Earth orbits the Sun. The Sun has its own proper motion through the Milky Way galaxy, and orbits the center of the galaxy every 220 million years or so. The Milky Way galaxy itself is moving, but because we don't have any fixed point of reference in the universe, we don't know in what direction.