The answer is Jetstream.
The direction of a particle moving in a circle at a given time can be found by determining the tangent to the circle at that point. The tangent is perpendicular to the radius of the circle at that point and indicates the direction of motion.
The direction of acceleration when moving in a circle is toward the center of the circle. This centripetal acceleration is responsible for changing the direction of the velocity vector as an object moves in circular motion.
A BACK AZIMUTH IS A PROJECTION OF THE AZIMUTH FROM THE ORIGIN TO THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE AZIMUTH CIRCLE. i.e. THERE ARE 360 DEGREES IN AN AZIMUTH CIRCLE, THUS THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION IS 180 DEGREES.
That means, the rotation is in the same direction as the hands of an analog clock or watch move. This is also known as rotating "to the right": if a circle rotates in a clockwise direction, then the upper part moves to the right.
A centripetal force is a center-directed force that continuously changes the direction of an object to make it move in a circle. It is responsible for keeping the object moving in a curved path, as it pulls or pushes the object towards the center of the circle. This force is necessary to counteract the natural tendency of an object to move in a straight line.
It is known as the Jet Stream.
The Current in the ocean spins in a circle.
The direction of acceleration when moving in a circle is toward the center of the circle. This centripetal acceleration is responsible for changing the direction of the velocity vector as an object moves in circular motion.
the Arctic Circle is north of the equator.
Moving in a clockwise direction on a circle is the equivalent to moving from right to left. This is also the direction used to tighten bolts.
Altitude, atlas, Antarctic Circle and Arctic Circle are geography terms. They begin with the letter A.
Positions in the sky are measured by angles. The simplest is the altitude, the angle above the horizon, and the azimuth, the direction measured running eastwards from north. There are other systems but always two coordinates are needed to specify a direction. Star positions are measured with a transit-circle, which always faces exactly south, and the stars are timed as they cross the meridian. The altitude gives the star's declination in degrees and the time gives the right-ascension in hours and minutes after a standard direction known as the First Point of Aries has passed.
Every point in the USA is north of the Antarctic Circle.
During motion in a vertical circle, the force of gravity (weight of the object) is in the same direction as the motion for half the time and in the opposite direction for the rest.For a body moving in a horizontal circle, gravity is acting orthogonally to the motion at all times.During motion in a vertical circle, the force of gravity (weight of the object) is in the same direction as the motion for half the time and in the opposite direction for the rest.For a body moving in a horizontal circle, gravity is acting orthogonally to the motion at all times.During motion in a vertical circle, the force of gravity (weight of the object) is in the same direction as the motion for half the time and in the opposite direction for the rest.For a body moving in a horizontal circle, gravity is acting orthogonally to the motion at all times.During motion in a vertical circle, the force of gravity (weight of the object) is in the same direction as the motion for half the time and in the opposite direction for the rest.For a body moving in a horizontal circle, gravity is acting orthogonally to the motion at all times.
North.
A circle is a shape that has no particular direction. There is, therefore, no particular direction for anything to be perpendicular to. To that extent, this question is nonsense.Every diameter of a circle bisects it, so just draw any line through its centre!
The direction of a body moving in a circular path is constantly changing due to centripetal acceleration. At any point in the circle, the body is moving tangent to the circle, while the acceleration is directed towards the center of the circle.