There are a couple of factors. One is the rotation of the earth. Travelling west and the destination is moving toward you. Travel east and it is moving away from you. Another is the winds that affect flight.
East
They get there by plane or cars.
To the East; by plane, New York-London-Bucharest.
Yes but not occupying the same airspace. One airplane can travel behind another. A plane in geometry is a two dimensional flat surface. I assume you mean airplane.
Boat, train,or plane
You would be traveling east by plane or boat.
A round trip plane ticket allows you to travel to a destination and then return to your starting point on the same ticket. It includes both the outbound and return flights. In contrast, a one-way ticket only covers travel from one point to another without the return journey.
Yes, plane polarization occurs in transverse waves. In transverse waves, the oscillations of the wave propagate perpendicular to the direction of the wave's travel. This allows the wave to exhibit different types of polarization, such as linear, circular, or elliptical polarization.
The cost for return airfare to Andaman will depend on several things. The cost will depend on the date of travel, the time of travel and which airline is taken. The area of the plane where the seat will be chosen will also come into play.
The direction of the force refers to the path along which the force is applied, whether it be push, pull, or any other direction. The plane of application of force refers to the flat surface or plane on which the force is applied. The direction and the plane of application of force are independent of each other and can be at different angles.
A crosswind is any wind that is not in the same direction as travel. The crosswind component is perpendicular to the direction of travel ( 90 degrees). Mathematically, the crosswind component is the speed times the sine of the angle relative to the direction of travel. For example if a plane travels NORTH and there is a crosswind from the EAST ( 90 degrees) at 20 mph the crosswind component is 20 mph ( 20 sin90 = 20) For another example if a plane travels NORTH and there is a crosswind from the NORTHEAST ( 45 degrees) at 20 mph the crosswind component is 14.1mph ( 20 sin45 = 14.1)
Light waves oscillate in the two dimensions perpendicular to it's direction of travel, meaning that they oscillate radially from the centre of the line of travel. Adding a specific filter will cancel out all these oscillations except for in a single plane, whose first axis can be defined as being the direction it is travelling in, and the second being a single line perpendicular to this direction.