becaus its gravity spin it counter clocckwise
hurricanes north of the equtor spin counter clockwise and south is clockwise
In the Northern Hemisphere, hurricanes spin counterclockwise due to the Coriolis effect. In the Southern Hemisphere, hurricanes spin clockwise for the same reason.
Jupiter spins counter clockwise. To be exact, it spins counterclockwise when viewed from above the north pole. That's the same direction of spin as most of the planets, including Earth.
Sort of. Pulling air inward and the formation of a circulation are necessary for a hurricane to develop, but they are also consequences of the low pressure area that is the precursor of a hurricane, which is powered by warm, moist air.
If a ball is spun counter clockwise, it would travel in the direction opposite of the spin. So, it would move to the right if you are looking at it from above.
anticlockwise
yes, mercury does spin counter clockwise.
Well the earth spins counter clockwise on its axis.
hurricanes north of the equtor spin counter clockwise and south is clockwise
A shuriken is also known as a throwing star. Which way a shuriken spins depends on the motion of your wrist as you throw. You can make it go clockwise, or counter clockwise.
Beyblades that spin counter clockwise include Left Spin Beyblades such as the Spriggan series and Legend Spriggan. These Beyblades have a different spin direction from the traditional right spin Beyblades.
usually counter-clockwise.
Something cannot travel counter clockwise. Tornadoes usually travel in a weterly direction. Tornadoes that occur in the northern hemisphere usually spin counterclockwise, while those in the southern hemisphere usually spin clockwise.
In the Northern Hemisphere, hurricanes spin counterclockwise due to the Coriolis effect. In the Southern Hemisphere, hurricanes spin clockwise for the same reason.
Most tornadoes in the northern hemisphere spin counter clockwise while most in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
Of course. It is a left-spin Beyblade.
Jupiter spins counter clockwise. To be exact, it spins counterclockwise when viewed from above the north pole. That's the same direction of spin as most of the planets, including Earth.