List of how the average Wikipedia reader is currently moving

This is a an annotated list of ways in which a typical human sitting at a computer screen is moving. Types of movement listed here include both changes in location of the individual as well as the many smaller movements occurring within a human.

It's difficult to tell but the average individual sitting in front of a computer screen is moving in a variety of ways. However, Newton's laws of motion (particularly Inertia) prevent these individuals from feeling most of it. And a human's limited perspective from here on Earth does not provided him or her with any frame of reference that would allow them to see that they are moving. Additionally many of the forms of motion are too small for a human to sense. Humans are always moving in a number of distinct ways on at least ten different scales.

Universe
*Spacetime (the fabric of the universe) is actually expanding. Essentially, everything in the universe is stretching like a rubber band. This motion is the most obscure as it is not physical motion as such, but rather a change in the very nature of the universe. The primary source of verification of this expansion was provided by Edwin Hubble who demonstrated that all galaxies and distant astronomical objects were moving away from us ("Hubble's law") as predicted by a universal expansion.

Galaxy
*The Milky Way Galaxy, is hurling through space at an incredible speed. It is powered by the force left over from the Big Bang. Many astronomers believe the Milky Way is moving at approximately 600 km/s relative to the observed locations of other nearby galaxies. Another reference frame is provided by the Cosmic microwave background. This frame of reference indicates that The Milky Way is moving at around 552 km/s.

Solar System
*The Milky Way is rotating around it's dense galactic center, thus the solar system is moving in a circle within the galaxy's gravity. Away from the central bulge or outer rim, the typical stellar velocity is between 210 and 240 km/s.

Earth
*The Earth is rotating or spinning around it's axis, this is evidenced by day and night, at the equator the earth has an eastward velocity of 0.4651 km/s (or 1040 mi/h)
*The Earth is orbiting around the Sun in an orbital revolution. A complete orbit around the sun takes one year or about 365 days, it averages a speed of about 30 km/s (or 67,000 mi/h).

Continents
*The Theory of Plate tectonics tells us that the continents are drifting on convection currents within the mantle causing them to move across the surface of the planet at the slow speed of approximately 1 inch (2.54 cm) per year. However, the velocities of plates range widely. The fastest-moving plates are the oceanic plates, with the Cocos Plate advancing at a rate of 75 mm/yr (3.0 in/yr) and the Pacific Plate moving 52–69 mm/yr (2.1–2.7 in/yr). At the other extreme, the slowest-moving plate is the Eurasian Plate, progressing at a typical rate of about 21 mm/yr (0.8 in/yr).

External Body
Aside from obvious movements of the arms, hands, fingers, feet, toes, torso, head, face, eyes, and mouth.

*The human chest is in constant motion from the action of breathing and the beating of the heart.
*Humans eyes move as they are read the words in this article and they are being kept wet as the eyelid blinks.

Internal Body
*The human heart is constantly contracting to move blood throughout the body.
*The smooth muscles of hollow internal organs are moving. The most common motion would be peristalsis as digesting food is forced throughout the digestive tract.
*Typically some sound is audible at any given moment, when the vibration of these sound waves reaches the ear drum it moves in response and allows the sense of hearing.
*The human lymphatic system is constantly moving excess fluids, lipids, and immune system related products around the body.

Cells
The cells of the human body have many structures which move throughout them.
*These include cytoplasmic streaming which is one way that a cell moves vesicles, and numerous proteins and other macromolecules throughout the cell's cytoplasm.
* Various motor proteins work as molecular motors with a cell and move along the surface of various cellulars substrate such as microtubules. Motor proteins are typically powered by the hydrolysis of ATP and convert chemical energy into mechanical work.

Particles
*According to the laws of thermodynamics all particles of matter are in constant random motion as long as the temperature is above absolute zero. Thus the molecules and atoms which make you up are vibrating, colliding, and moving. This motion can be detected as temperature; high temperatures (which represent greater kinetic energy in the particles) feel warmer to humans, whereas lower temperatures feel colder.

Subatomic Particles
*Within each atom the electrons are speeding around the nucleus so fast that they are not actually in one location, but rather smeared across a region of the electron cloud. Electrons have a high velocity, and the larger the nucleus they are orbiting the faster they move. In a hydrogen atom, electrons have been calculated to be orbiting at a speed of approximately 242,000 m/s
* Inside the atomic nucleus the protons and neutrons are also probably moving around due the electrical repulsion of the protons and the presence of angular momentum of both particles.
 
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