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Check with an unused teabag
which results in an anticlockwise rotation of the water as I fill the mug, so naturally the bag unwinds clockwise.
They rarely rotate significantly until wet.
Not if the teabag is resting against the side or bottom of the mug.
It also occurs with the drainage of water in a toilet bowl. It either depends on the manufacturer or which side of the equator you are on.
... no consistent difference in rotation direction between toilet drainage in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres can be observed...
Quote from: Arrual on 08/12/2014 02:50:56It also occurs with the drainage of water in a toilet bowl. It either depends on the manufacturer or which side of the equator you are on. That's an urban myth ...Quote from: wikipedia.org/wiki/Coriolis_effect ... no consistent difference in rotation direction between toilet drainage in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres can be observed...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coriolis_effect#Draining_in_bathtubs_and_toilets [nofollow]
Quote from: Arrual on 08/12/2014 02:50:56It also occurs with the drainage of water in a toilet bowl. It either depends on the manufacturer or which side of the equator you are on.As RD explained, that's a common misconception. It's based on the assumption that it's caused by Coriolis forces acting on the water. The fact is that it's due to things such as the direction in which water leaves your toilet and the shape of the bowl and the angle at which the liquid initially enters that bowl. If there was a container of water which had a hole at the bottom which was simply "unplugged" with no rotation acting during the unplugging then there's no way to determine which way it will rotate, if it rotates at all. It might rotate according to the Coriolis effect but the effect is miniscule to have a large effect on the direction of direction of the water.
Thanks for the clearification.
Update to the OP: Twinings Spicy Chai tea bags rotate anti-clockwise! []
Well, I don't think it's the Coriolis effect, neither Brownian motion., How about the way the strings strands are twisted together? Combined with the elasticity and tension of a drier relative wetter string?
Check with an unused teabag - on the off chance that despite everything they turn clockwise, that is only a result of the assembling procedure. In the event that not, I expect it originates from a propensity you have in the manner in which you pour the water from the pot into the mug. Having quite recently made a cuppa myself, I speculate that it is a curio of propensity. By and by I am correct given, and the most precise approach to ensure I don't spill the water is to empty it into the contrary side from me, which results in an anticlockwise revolution of the water as I fill the mug, so normally the pack loosens up clockwise.