The earth travels its path around the sun exactly onetime per year. The time it takes to travel that path one time is our definition of a "year".
During that time, the earth also spins on its axis about 365.25 times. Those spins are 'days'.
(clearification of the number of spins, or rotations on the axis)
This is the first answer that comes to mind because there are approximately 365.25 days in a year, but that is wrong. Actually it takes 366.25 rotations to accomplish 365.25 days. Visualize this: The earth not rotating at all but still moving around the sun. As the earth traveled in it's orbit, not rotating, it would appear to an earthling that the sun goes around the earth one time in a year - but it would rise in the west because of the orbit of the earth being counterclockwise. Now, if you increase the rotation on the earths axis to one time per year counterclockwise, there would appear to be no motion of the sun, or zero days per year. Similar to the moon rotating on it's axis one time per orbit around the earth. The same face is always toward the earth. Consequently, if the earth rotated on its axis once a year, it would always be daylight on half the earth, and always be night on the other half. To appear to have one day per year with the sun rising in the east, it would require 2 rotations on the axis in the counterclockwise direction. Therefore it always requires one more rotation on its axis than the apparent number of days in the year. Since it appears that we have 365.25 days per year, it requires 366.25 rotations on the earths axis for that to happen.
because the earth spins round on it axis and spins round the sun so when we are at one side of the sun its winter and our country is faced tilted away from the sun and opposite for summer
Maybe someone who is trying to prove that and doesn't know the right answer
Gravity keeps planets in orbit as it spins it creates gravity and gravitational pull keeps the a lined
Its called the earth's axis
The Earth spins precisely 360 degrees - exactly one complete revolution - in 23 hours 56 minutes. So what's with the 24 hours in a day stuff? The problem is that from one day to the next, the Earth itself has moved along in its orbit - and to make up for that change, the Earth needs to spin for another 4 minutes! So "one day" is the time from noon to noon, but that's actually a little bit more than one turn.
No, it spins in place and we rotate around it.
The Earth neither spins round the Sun nor the Moon. The Earth rotates(spins) on it own axis, top give us night and day. The Moon revolves (orbits) round the Earth once a month (Moonth). The Earth and Moon, as a binary system revolve (orbit) round the Sun once a year. The Moon making 13 orbits of the Earth in once a year.
The Guptas discovered that the earth is round and that it spins on an axis.
doesnt it spins everyday it spins 1 complete spin
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.
Im not sure i understand your question but doesn't the earth spin quite a bit faster because it takes 24 hrs for the earth to complete one rotation or spin but it takes the moon about 15 days to complete one orbit of the earth
Yes. It depends on the position in its orbit.
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.
the sun has like a magnetic field and the earth has to orbit it. in order to do so it spins on its axis
The moon spins on its axis as it orbits the Earth because of the gravitational forces between the two bodies. The Earth spins on its axis because of its initial rotation and the conservation of angular momentum.
If the satellite is in an orbit that takes it over the North and South Poles, it will eventually cover all parts of the Earth as the Earth spins beneath it. This kind of orbit is called a polar orbit.
The axis is actually an imaginary line that the Earth spins around. It represents the tilt of the Earth relative to its orbit.