1. The Earth rotates on its axis from West to East with its axis in the North/South direction (by definition of North and South). So it is rotating "due North" because of the right hand rule.
2. The Earth revolves around the Sun about 23 degrees from "due north". (This is why we have seasons!)
3. The Moon revolves around the Earth about 5 degrees from the direction the Earth revolves around the Sun. The Moon's rotation is about 1.5 degrees from the direction the Earth revolves around the Sun.
4. All the planets revolve in the same general direction, with Pluto's orbit being the most inclined (17 degrees). Their axes of rotation are more diverse, Uranus and Pluto rotate 'on their sides' and Venus's axis points towards the South.
5. Our Galaxy, on the other hand, is completely different. The Sun revolves around the galaxy in a totally different direction. Using that "right hand rule" you need to point your thumb toward the "South Galactic Pole." This is located above the southern hemisphere, at 27 degrees south latitude. So the rotation axis of the Galaxy is tilted by 117 degrees from the rotation axis of the Earth.
You can see this at night, by noting that the Milky Way (the disk of the galaxy) is always across the sky in some funny direction. Never due East-West.
6. Our Galaxy, the Milky Way, is also moving in some funny direction (completely unrelated to any of the other directions) as it orbits the other galaxies nearby.
2006-12-31 00:54:12
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Don't know about the moon but earth rotates from west to east.
2014-06-21 04:48:28
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answer #2
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answered by Kimberly S 2
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Daily we see the stars moving from east to west on the northern hemisphere. That is why the earth rotates opposite.
The moon does not rotate relative to the earth.
Th
2006-12-31 00:49:26
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answer #3
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answered by Thermo 6
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earth rotates from east to west and moon rotates noth to south
2006-12-31 00:46:59
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answer #4
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answered by kws 1
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West to east both the earth & moon rotates......
2006-12-31 00:55:38
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answer #5
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answered by Akshitha 5
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question: Does the moon and the Earth rotate interior the comparable direction? Quote: the full project paragraph for individuals who decide directly to appreciate. answer: The moon would not rotate so I recommend you're beginning off your degree hat off. think of that a ball has purple one side and blue the different and fasten the string to a 2nd ball that makes the purple and blue ball wind around it fairly than decide on it. Now spin it. result: The side you related the string to the 2nd ball is purple on the 1st ball, after spinning the purple side is often seen by utilising the 2nd ball. The blue side is the by no skill seen side. end: The purple and blue ball is the moon with the seen and non-seen side from the 2nd ball, and the 2nd ball is the Earth.
2016-10-28 19:35:51
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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if you were to look strait at the earths north pole for space, you would see it rotateing counter clockwise, and the moon dose not rotate at all, thats why you always see the same side of it. it dose, however, orbit the earth. hope that was a little less star trek for you, way too much info Aanchal.
2006-12-31 01:00:46
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answer #7
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answered by andrew o 2
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only earth rotates east to west
Moon does not
2006-12-31 03:55:32
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answer #8
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answered by James Chan 4
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North to south
2006-12-31 03:18:47
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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all planets and moons around our sun rotate the same way,but one triton a moon around neptune rotates e to w
2006-12-31 04:55:36
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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