You are flying west (start at north, and work your way around clockwise, 90 degrees for every quarter of a circle)
on a heading indicator there are 360 degrees, North being 0, East being 90, South 180, and West 270, the helicopter's flying SW, and is therfore in the middle of 180 and 270, so your answer is 225 degrees
It depends on where in the US you are flying from. If you are flying from Detroit you would fly in a SSE direction. From Miami you would go ESE.
Pilots first instrument used in flying was a compass so they could orient themselves in what direction they've been heading and should head based on time and speed.
No specific direction. However, flying into strong headwinds can slow forward momentum
NNE is the direction you would fly.
If a bird flew in a straight line from Alabama to Michigan, it would generally be flying northward. Specifically, depending on the starting point in Alabama, the bird might be heading slightly northeast as it moves toward Michigan.
Pilots and sailors first instrument used in flying and sailing was a compass so they could orient themselves in what direction they've been heading and should head based on time and speed.
WE WOULD BE FLYING IN EASTERN DIRECTION FROM MIA TO LON.
When flying from England to Brazil, you'd be flying in a southwesterly direction.
detroit
Northwest.