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Quote from: gem on 21/08/2021 16:25:38QuoteThese are length of solar day, which get shorter this time of every year due to our orbit not being perfectly circular. This is purely a visual effect, not an actual delta in the spin rate.I was talking about the spin rate, the sidereal rate, the time it takes to revolve exactly 360°, which is the rate from which the angular momentum is computed. This is a thread about momentum, not about when the sun appears to rise.I'm afraid your mistaken, for example, the earth rotation ( LOD ) was actually slowing down between the 5th to the 13 th of august,and the published values I posted are from : LOD - FINALS.DAILY (IAU1980) from the IERS What part of my comment is mistaken? I didn't contradict the numbers. I said that the LOD numbers are a visual effect, completely unrelated to the daily variations in the angular velocity of Earth. Do you have any reading comprehension skills at all???Quotewhy did the LOD get shorter yesterday will today and tomorrow ?What part of my explanation cannot you comprehend?Sorry, I cannot add more because you're just repeating things. The LOD variations as published on your site is due to our elliptical orbit and has nothing to do with changes in the time taken to go around 360°, which is about 23 hours 56 minutes with a lot less variation than the numbers you post, but variation nevertheless, and almost always increasing due to the perpetual negative torque continuously being applied from outside the planet.
QuoteThese are length of solar day, which get shorter this time of every year due to our orbit not being perfectly circular. This is purely a visual effect, not an actual delta in the spin rate.I was talking about the spin rate, the sidereal rate, the time it takes to revolve exactly 360°, which is the rate from which the angular momentum is computed. This is a thread about momentum, not about when the sun appears to rise.I'm afraid your mistaken, for example, the earth rotation ( LOD ) was actually slowing down between the 5th to the 13 th of august,and the published values I posted are from : LOD - FINALS.DAILY (IAU1980) from the IERS
These are length of solar day, which get shorter this time of every year due to our orbit not being perfectly circular. This is purely a visual effect, not an actual delta in the spin rate.I was talking about the spin rate, the sidereal rate, the time it takes to revolve exactly 360°, which is the rate from which the angular momentum is computed. This is a thread about momentum, not about when the sun appears to rise.
why did the LOD get shorter yesterday will today and tomorrow ?
For regular changes in the length of a solar day through the year due to the obliquity of the ecliptic and the eccentricity of the Earth's orbit around the Sun, see Equation of time.
Hi all,Thanks for the input ES and BC,Yes its absolutely fair enough, Halc was making that point, and I thought I had addressed it by pointing out the reverse affect to the data I posted was measured to be happening a few days earlier, which wouldn't tie in with the Solar day example/argument, indeed its reversed again since I posted the results.Also in regards to the value of the numbers involved I believe the range of the Solar day effect, is somewhere in the range/vicinity of ;± 4 seconds throughout the year,Whereas the fluctuations I posted sit within range of about ± 1.5 x10^-3 seconds throughout the year. It really is quite an achievement of science that there is monitoring to that degree.
Hi all,BC Which units are not correct ?
Length of day variations/fluctuations in milli seconds as published today for the relevant dates. ( - = minus )15/08/2021 - 0.405816/08/2021 - 0.663317/08/2021 - 0.999818/08/2021 - 1.0715
I have totally lost track of your point with this sidetrack. This new chart mostly illustrates the effects of external torque on Earth, but it does also suggest large scale sustained momentum transfer between air and ground.What are you driving at with all these posts? Are you in denial of momentum conservation? Are you in denial that thermal energy from the sun can generate air currents on Earth? It is really unclear since the posts have no common thread and seem just haphazard.
The atmospheric angular momentum (AAM) is that due to the motion of the winds and to the changes in mass distribution
However this is only a preamble that links to several other phenomena,
Righto you now accept that there is a on going large scale transfer of momentum between the atmosphere and the solid Earth, measurable (daily) as changes in Earth rotation rate,and polar motion
On average, that transfer is zero in the long term.
You then have to stop mixing talk about the real Earth with its friction, mass transfer, momentum fluctuations and all, and work with an ideal case, say a frictionless solid ball with spinning atmosphere that is initially totally stationary relative to its rotating reference frame, and then heated on one side. That will generate air currents. The vertical reaction pair is with the surface which does not give with the altered pressure. The initial horizontal action-reaction pair would be atmosphere on either side of the heated region which would either move apart or together (probably the latter). Either way, you now have wind (air no longer stationary in that rotating frame), but no sailboat since our ideal planet is frictionless, so nothing for the keel to dig into. Can't even fly a kite.
If the planet is not frictionless as you describe, then yes, the atmosphere ceases to be a closed system, but planet+atmosphere still can be, and conservation laws still apply. Are you asserting otherwise, or is you point something else? It's still unclear.
Appearances can be deceptive, there are patterns in the data that suggest that may not be the case.
Those equal and opposite laws apply vertically just as much as horizontally. Air will not accelerate without a net force exerted on it by something else.
Quote from: HalcThose equal and opposite laws apply vertically just as much as horizontally. Air will not accelerate without a net force exerted on it by something else.Yes but not initially involving the surface, as you stated, warm air is displaced by cooler/denser air
In regards to the point made with to many commas,,,,, then lets try the globe vessel suspended on a friction-less gimble
Lets then apply heat centrally, underneath it (as we are not in an inertial reference frame)
so we get a central column of convection upwards and an equal flow downwards around the sides of the globe.
If the inside of the vessel surface coefficient of friction was designed to replicate an anemometer to favour more friction in one direction
what effect would this have on the momentum of the system ?
Therefore changing the density which triggers convection due to buoyancy spontaneously creating upthrust, exerted as a result of the weight of the denser overlying fluid. "this can only occur in a non inertial frame of reference"
You can apply an inertial frame of reference on any system you like. Your assertion in quotes still suggests that convection currents cannot occur with say gas in a box in deep space, which is about as inertial as it gets. That assertion is dead wrong. You heat gas, it expands, and that expansion is motion (convection)
Not generated. Transferred. It has to come from somewhere, so an equal and opposite torque needs to be transferred to the ground or the air or somewhere. Despite the asymmetry, a continuously spinning anemometer in steady wind has no net torque on it. The net transfer is only needed to speed it up or slow it down.
I believe the torque is generated from the frictional forces of the velocity of the mass of air colliding with the cups and circular design of the apparatus.
But the angular momentum of the whole ( rock, air, anemometer, bloke holding it ) system remains unchanged.
Buoyancy is not a violation of momentum conservation. It cannot generate new momentum, so to speak. The total remains constant for a closed system.
I don't know what you mean by 'discriminate'. It is an epistemological word