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.....how do the oceans ignore the equator centrifuge force ?
Quote from: Starlight on 11/02/2020 15:33:38.....how do the oceans ignore the equator centrifuge force ?They don’t. There is a bulge which is max at the equator giving the earth the appearance of a slightly flattened sphere. Worth noting that it’s not just the oceans, the land bulges as well.
Then how could it be possible for the ocean water above and below the equator to ignore the centrifuge force , retaining position ?
From my understanding of the nature of forces , water will ''flirt'' off ANY rotating object !
how do the oceans ignore the equator centrifuge force ?
To put some math to this question, I'll use the centrifugal force equation:Fc = (mv2)/r, where"Fc" is the force in newtons,"m" is the mass in kilograms,"v" is the local rotational velocity in meters per second, and"r" is the distance from the center of rotation in meters.For a 70 kilogram human standing along the equator, the resulting centrifugal force acting on them is:Fc = (mv2)/rFc = ((70 kg)(461 m/s)2)/6,334,080 mFc = 2.3486 newtonsFor comparison, gravity pulls on a 70 kilogram human with a force of 70 kg x 9.807 m/s2 = 686.49 newtons. The centrifugal force is only 0.34% of the gravitational force at the equator. The human (or the ocean) is in no danger of being flung off of the Earth.
Quote from: Colin2B on 11/02/2020 15:37:22Quote from: Starlight on 11/02/2020 15:33:38.....how do the oceans ignore the equator centrifuge force ?They don’t. There is a bulge which is max at the equator giving the earth the appearance of a slightly flattened sphere. Worth noting that it’s not just the oceans, the land bulges as well.Then how could it be possible for the ocean water above and below the equator to ignore the centrifuge force , retaining position ? From my understanding of the nature of forces , water will ''flirt'' off ANY rotating object ! Link courtesy of youtube .//www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVo2qdXxQ7o
You have to take all the forces involved and their relative magnitudes into account.
Centrifugal effect acts outward away from the axis of rotation.
Your answers this far have not explained how some of the water has enough inertia to retain location north and south of the equator whilst some of the water forms an ocean bulge at the equator !
How much centrifuge force would it take to displace 1g of mass of water carefully placed onto a disk shape that was about to be spun?
Am I to believe that this force isn't enough to bulge all the water ?
Why would some water bulge and the above and under remain in location when as mentioned it has no ''grip'' ?
Quote from: Janus on 11/02/2020 17:50:44You have to take all the forces involved and their relative magnitudes into account. I did ! QuoteCentrifugal effect acts outward away from the axis of rotation. A centrifuge force is a linear force and it is for the same reason of orbiting planets . As you must be aware the Earth wants to travel a linear path but the suns gravitational hold creates the curvature path the earth travels . An object that is spinning throws things off in a linear path +v(x) . The centrifuge force is a linear ejection ! Drawing (1).png (61.44 kB . 461x404 - viewed 20000 times)Your answers this far have not explained how some of the water has enough inertia to retain location north and south of the equator whilst some of the water forms an ocean bulge at the equator !
As water North and South of the equator tries to move toward the equator it can only do so by displacing water that is already there upward. Since gravity is still the predominate effect at the equator, This water has to lifted against gravity. As more water builds up at the equator, the bulge gets taller and contains more water. Gravity acting on this bulge wants to flatten it, resisting the growth of the bulge. The larger the bulge gets, the more "push back" is created. Eventually, the force of the "push back" equals the force from the water trying to move toward the equator and a balance is reached.This will result in a oblate spheroid shape. The rate of spin of the Earth is so slow that the amount of bulge isn't even noticeable to the bare eye.
How much centrifuge force would it take to displace 1g of mass of water carefully placed onto a disk shape that was about to be spun?A centrifuge force is actually a linear force as I suspect you must already know . In fluid dynamics , water has little to no way of 'gripping'' a surface . It was explained earlier that the centrifuge force of the earth has sufficient magnitude to alter the shape of the earth. Am I to believe that this force isn't enough to bulge all the water ?Why would some water bulge and the above and under remain in location when as mentioned it has no ''grip'' ?
Does the North and South magnetic poles also apply tensors on the oceans to create the stretching of the oceans ?
The spinning dish analogy fails to reproduce what we observe precisely because the earth has a gripping force that the dish/water doesn't: gravity.
Quote from: Starlight on 13/02/2020 13:45:25Does the North and South magnetic poles also apply tensors on the oceans to create the stretching of the oceans ?Such an effect would be very, very small if it does exist. Water is not particularly magnetic (and Earth's magnetic field is weak).
As water North and South of the equator tries to move toward the equator it can only do so by displacing water that is already there upward.
A centrifuge force is stronger than the weaker force of gravity !
If that is so , then I still do not feel the answers given this far have given a satisfactory explanation !