Roughly, it is estimated that about 16 million tons of rain fall on Earth every minute. This can vary depending on the season and geographical location.
The movement of the earth does not have an affect on time as such. Because the earths movements are not completely smooth and unchanging, it is necessary to alter our clocks, from time to time, to reflect these changes tiny though they are they accumulate.
The three major units of Earth time are days, months, and years. A day is the time it takes for the Earth to complete one rotation on its axis. A month is approximately the time it takes for the Moon to orbit the Earth. A year is the time it takes for the Earth to orbit around the Sun.
Weather is the condition of Earth's atmosphere at a particular time and place.
Earth changes all the time making it a dynamic and ever-evolving planet.
On average, there are about 44 flashes of lightning per second and 2,400 times per minute on Earth. This equates to approximately 1.4 billion lightning strikes worldwide every year.
365days 6hours9minutes 9.8seconds(seconds rounded)
The sun is rising somewhere on Earth every minute of every day.
time by time
actually no one knows the day,time,year,second,minute or hour the bible says
During every minute of the day there will be places on Earth experiencing sunset.
No. 30 seconds is always half a minute. However, on other planets, since they rotate at different speeds, time is counted differently to how it would be on Earth. (If one rotation on the planet's axis is "a day", but they rotate quicker than the Earth does, a minute will be fewer seconds that it would be on Earth). You may find a planet where 30 seconds = a minute, however I don't know which one that could be off hand.
The sun is setting somewhere on earth every minute of every day.
it takes about 6 months earth time for mars to rotate around the sun
Let's do some math: The Earth rotates in 24 hours and during that time it covers 360 degrees. One hour has 60 minutes, so a day has 24x60=1440 minutes. Therefore, the Earth covers 360/1440 degrees per day and 0.25 degrees per minute.
Sunset is happening somewhere on earth every minute of every day.
Every minute on Earth, tens of thousands of lightning strikes occur, millions of people exhale carbon dioxide, and billions of heartbeats happen. Time zones change, satellites orbit the planet, and animals hunt, feed, and rest.