Once around the Milky Way would take about 225 -> 250 million years.
It would take approximately 25,000 light-years to travel from Earth to the center of the Milky Way galaxy at the speed of light. This journey is not currently possible with our current technology as it would require significantly advanced propulsion systems and energy sources.
The Sun does not circle Earth. Earth circles around the Sun. It takes one year for Earth to revolve once around the Sun.
Earth revolves around the Sun once per year.
Orbit
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.
There are several answers to your question: * The Earth rotates around its axis (the line between the North and South pole) once a day. * The Earth revolves around the Sun once a year. * The Earth, together with the Sun and the Solar System, revolves around the center of the Milky Way Galaxy in approximately 250 millions years! The Earth, Solar System, and Galaxy all move together through the universe, but it is difficult to say that it moves "around" anything in the process.
It would take approximately 25,000 light-years to travel from Earth to the center of the Milky Way galaxy at the speed of light. This journey is not currently possible with our current technology as it would require significantly advanced propulsion systems and energy sources.
There exists only one known universe and the Earth is in it. Even if the theory of multiple dimensions was proven, the Earth would actually still exist in all of those separate dimensions at once.
The earth is falling. It takes the earth an entire year to fall once around the sun.
The Sun does not circle Earth. Earth circles around the Sun. It takes one year for Earth to revolve once around the Sun.
24 hours
Earth revolves around the Sun once per year.
The Earth's Moon orbits around Earth once in a Month and the Earth orbits around the Sun once in a year, so the Moon orbits around the Sun once in a year too.
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 doesn't. The Milky Way galaxy is 100,000-120,000 light-years in diameter. The Sun's mass is nowhere near large enough to make the entire galaxy revolve around itself. The Milky Way appears to revolve around us because of our position on Earth. The Earth spins incredibly fast, and is moving much faster than the sun, so therefore the Sun also appears to be rotating around us. However, the Sun orbits the Galactic core, once every (roughly) 226 million years.
It takes the Sun (i.e., the Solar System) ca. 240 million years to go once around the Milky Way.
The sun does not travel around the Earth, Earth travels around the sun. The Earth rotates once every 24 hours.