Counter clockwise rotation is also known as retrograde rotation. This type of rotation is less common and can be seen in some planets and moons, such as Venus and Uranus.
It is anticlockwise when viewed from the north. This applies to both its daily rotation and its revolution around the Sun. The angular momentum vector in both cases points to the north.
Prograde rotation is the rotation of an object in the same direction as its orbit around another object, while retrograde rotation is the rotation in the opposite direction of its orbit. For example, most planets in our solar system have prograde rotation, where they rotate counterclockwise when viewed from above the North Pole. Venus, however, has retrograde rotation, rotating clockwise when viewed from above the North Pole.
Both Venus and Uranus have clockwise, i.e. retrograde, rotation.
Venus
The earth's rotation is described as a counter-clockwise movement which passes through the north and south poles. This is what will result to day and night.
The rotation is clockwise.
It's called the 'Coriolis effect'. In the northern hemisphere, they rotate clockwise. South of the equator, they rotate counter-clockwise.
It's called the 'Coriolis effect'. In the northern hemisphere, they rotate clockwise. South of the equator, they rotate counter-clockwise.
It's called the 'Coriolis effect'. In the northern hemisphere, they rotate clockwise. South of the equator, they rotate counter-clockwise.
It's called the 'Coriolis effect'. In the northern hemisphere, they rotate clockwise. South of the equator, they rotate counter-clockwise.
Clockwise.
Rotation is the act of spinning or turning around a central axis. It is a transformation that changes the orientation of an object without changing its shape or size. Rotations are commonly used in geometry and can be clockwise or counterclockwise.
A clockwise rotation moves in the direction that clock hands move - from top to right to bottom to left. An anti-clockwise rotation moves in the opposite direction, from top to left to bottom to right.
It's called the 'Coriolis effect'. In the northern hemisphere, they rotate clockwise. South of the equator, they rotate counter-clockwise.
The answer will depend on whether the rotation is clockwise or anti-clockwise.
Clockwise in an automotive application.