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#11
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xerj writes:
I was talking about Coriolis effect with someone and he asked me about planes against or with the earth's spin of around 1000mph at the equator. The Coriolis effect is never a factor for east-west movement along the Equator. Additionally, the Coriolis effect due to the Earth's rotation is too small to have a significant effect on an aircraft. He asked why this didn't benefit east to west plane travel timewise and hurt west to east. The Coriolis effect is not a factor for east-west movement along the Equator. Aircraft travelling in the direction of the Earth's rotation weigh slightly less than aircraft travelling in the opposite direction because of centrifugal acceleration, but that is unrelated to the Coriolis effect and is too small to worry about in practice. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#12
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![]() "xerj" wrote in message ... I was talking about Coriolis effect with someone and he asked me about planes against or with the earth's spin of around 1000mph at the equator. He asked why this didn't benefit east to west plane travel timewise and hurt west to east. I couldn't give him a straight answer, and felt like an idiot when I said "it just doesn't". What IS the straight answer? The dropping something in a moving vehicle analogy doesn't work, does it? A plane has a method of acceleration, whereas a passively dropped object doesn't. Sometimes really simple questions can give you the worst time. How about the fact the air the plane is flying through also is traveling West to East. You are flying into a 1000 mph West to East headwind :-) A 100 mph airplane is flying backwards at 900 mph. Danny Dot |
#13
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![]() "xerj" wrote in message ... I was talking about Coriolis effect with someone and he asked me about planes against or with the earth's spin of around 1000mph at the equator. He asked why this didn't benefit east to west plane travel timewise and hurt west to east. I couldn't give him a straight answer, and felt like an idiot when I said "it just doesn't". What IS the straight answer? The dropping something in a moving vehicle analogy doesn't work, does it? A plane has a method of acceleration, whereas a passively dropped object doesn't. Sometimes really simple questions can give you the worst time. Hi xerj, I think this is a great question. Back in the [Harumph!] old days when I learned to fly we were taught in Metorlogy 101 that one indirect way coriolis force DOES affect east or west airtravel is what it does to the weather. The following is quoted from: TODAY'S TMJ4 WEATHER PLUS; Coriolis force affects wind patterns Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, The, Sep 18, 2006 by MIKE LAPOINT "When looking down at the North Pole, Earth spins counterclockwise around its axis. A point on the equator travels about 1,100 mph, while the points directly at the poles do not move at all. An apparent force called the Coriolis force results from this difference in speeds, deflecting objects to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. The Coriolis force, combined with solar heating patterns across Earth, creates distinctive wind patterns that drive weather systems. One prevailing surface wind pattern that results is in the mid- latitudes, between 30 and 60 degrees north. Solar heating alone, without Earth's rotation, would produce prevailing southerly winds. The Coriolis force, however, deflects these winds to the right, creating prevailing winds out of the west and southwest known as the westerlies." So, while coriolis has only a small direct affect, the winds can be a huge factor in slowing aircraft down on westerly flights. The above is just one of a bunch of hits from Google about coriolis force and the weather. |
#14
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![]() xerj wrote: I was talking about Coriolis effect with someone and he asked me about planes against or with the earth's spin of around 1000mph at the equator. He asked why this didn't benefit east to west plane travel timewise and hurt west to east. I couldn't give him a straight answer, and felt like an idiot when I said "it just doesn't". What IS the straight answer? The dropping something in a moving vehicle analogy doesn't work, does it? A plane has a method of acceleration, whereas a passively dropped object doesn't. Sometimes really simple questions can give you the worst time. Coriolis effect has a very significant effect on planes, just not directly. Its effect is felt in the wind patterns that is produces in terms of high and low pressure centers and their rotation. Every time you fly you account for the coriolis effect by checking the wind forecasts and doing the wind correction calculations... Dean |
#15
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T o d d P a t t i s t writes:
Coriolis force and Centrifugal force are both pseudo forces. I didn't say anything about forces. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#16
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C-force is a force, not a motion or change of motion.
True, there will be some "deflection" if the force is not resisted, but often it is resisted, so there will be a force, but no deflection. Exactly. When I said "deflection" I was referring to an unresisted case. It is easier to visualize. Once visualized, it becomes evident that resistance will generate a force, and that incomplete resistance will still leave some deflection (which is what causes the winds to circulate the way they do). C-force depends only on the velocity vector of the moving item... but what I'll call Coriolis deflection (the result of unresisted coriolis effect) depends on the time that has transpired. Consider the cannon at the North pole again. When the Acme RapidFire SuperSonic HighSpeed cannonball reaches the equator, it will be moving with next to no angular velocity (around the polar axis) while the ground underneath will be moving at a thousand miles an hour (eastward). Since the cannonball got there in LicketySplit time, the earth will not have had much time to move much, and the path would be pretty straight if drawn on the globe. This is easy to visualize, which is why I used it as an example. Now, resisted, there would have been a large force for a short time, therefore a high acceleration. I believe this is what you are referring to. However, if we put a SlugBall (tm) into that cannon, and it took a good six hours to get to the equator, and we also neglected air friction, the SlugBall, taking the very same (with respect to the fixed stars) path, would find that the earth has rotated a quarter of the way around in that time. It would have hit the Amazon, now it hits the Sahara. When drawn on the earth, the path is curved in a major way. This is also easy to visualize. At slower speeds, the deflection is much greater. Granted, if resisted, there'd be the same delta vee, over a much longer time, and therefore a smaller force. But it's a bigger deflection on the map unresisted. This is why I was careful to say "coriolis effect" and not "coriolis force". Perhaps that's a bit sloppy. Coriolis force is quite simply twice the vector cross product of the spin vector and the velocity vector. Most people equate "cross product" with "teenager". If you are flying East at the equator and reach your orbital speed the Coriolis force will equal the force of gravity and be upwardly directed. True, and in any case lessens the force on the wings, and thus the drag. I hadn't put that much together as being the same coriolis force. It could be said that coriolis force keeps a satellite in orbit. I think doing so however would tend to muddy the water before clearing it up. ![]() And the coriolis force on a southbound cannonball at the equator should be zero. Yet that is where you'd see the greatest coriolis effect ("unresisted deflection"). You'd be going south by the fixed stars, and the earth would be slipping past you right to left at a thousand miles an hour. Jose -- "There are 3 secrets to the perfect landing. Unfortunately, nobody knows what they are." - (mike). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#17
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T o d d P a t t i s t wrote:
Pilots tend to think of Coriolis force as being in one direction north of the equator, the opposite direction south of the equator and zero at the equator (if they think of it at all). However, it isn't zero at the equator, it's just pointed straight up. Is it pointed straight up or only affects objects moving straight up? My engineering mechanics and physics classes were more than two decades ago so I'm a little rusty, but I believe that coriolis acceleration/force doesn't act straight up at the equator, but acts perpendicular to the motion of an object moving up or down as opposed to along the earth's surface. For example, assume a rod extending upward at the equator, but normal to the earth's surface. Now put a metal doughnut on the rod and then lift it upward several hundred feet. The doughhut will be accelerated by a force from the rod that acts in a direction normal to the rod as the doughnut has to move faster as it gains altitude, right? Matt |
#18
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Matt Whiting wrote:
T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: Pilots tend to think of Coriolis force as being in one direction north of the equator, the opposite direction south of the equator and zero at the equator (if they think of it at all). However, it isn't zero at the equator, it's just pointed straight up. Is it pointed straight up or only affects objects moving straight up? At the equator the Coriolis force would be straight up for an airplane in level flight that's headed east and would be straight down if the airplane is in level flight headed west. If the airplane is going up or down then there would be a component of the Coriolis force towards the west or east, respectively. The direction of the Coriolis force will always be perpendicular to both the velocity of the object (airplane in this case) and the axis of the earth's rotation. In the case of level flight at the equator those two vectors are in a plane that's tangent to the earth's surface at the airplane's location and therefore the C. force is perpendicular and must be directly up or down. My engineering mechanics and physics classes were more than two decades ago so I'm a little rusty, but I believe that coriolis acceleration/force doesn't act straight up at the equator, but acts perpendicular to the motion of an object moving up or down as opposed to along the earth's surface. For example, assume a rod extending upward at the equator, but normal to the earth's surface. Now put a metal doughnut on the rod and then lift it upward several hundred feet. In that case the velocity vector is upward, the axis of earth's rotation is toward the north, and therefore the force will be perpendicular to both and toward the west. The rod must act to oppose that force if the donut is to travel straight up, so it exerts a force toward the east. doughhut will be accelerated by a force from the rod that acts in a direction normal to the rod as the doughnut has to move faster as it gains altitude, right? Yes. |
#19
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In article ,
Roy Smith wrote: Note that rocket launches are to the east (and why they try to launch them as close to the equator as possible). I think equatorial launch sites are only advantageous for certain types of desired orbits. true. But, not too many launch customers want polar orbits. And I don't think there is any penalty for launching near the equator. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#20
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Matt Whiting wrote:
Because when you leave the earth you are traveling the same relative speed as the earth as is the atmosphere in which you are traveling. Right. I think Xerj was confused because he was talking Coriolis effect and someone asked him why flying against the earth's spin isn't faster. The simple answer to that question is Newton's first law of inertia. The second question is how come it's faster to fly with the earth's spin then? The answer to that is that winds generally blow from west to east in the northern hemisphere... which is partially due to the Coriolis effect (as well as heating patterns). But that's an indirect effect. |
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