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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. |
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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. 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. Matt |
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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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In article ,
"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. A dropped object is indeed accelerating (down). It's just that the Coriolis effect isn't that significant. Note that rocket launches are to the east (and why they try to launch them as close to the equator as possible). Maybe tonight I can pull out my old (VERY old) Physics references and run some numbers... -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
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Bob Noel 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. In any case, this is an area in which the Europeans have the Americans beat. We launch from Florida, at about 30N, they launch from Kourou, French Guiana, at about 5N. |
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On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 08:38:56 -0500, Roy Smith wrote:
Bob Noel 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. In any case, this is an area in which the Europeans have the Americans beat. We launch from Florida, at about 30N, they launch from Kourou, French Guiana, at about 5N. Boeing launches from the equator. http://www.boeing.com/special/sea-launch/ The Earth's spin gives a "head start" of about 900 nautical miles per hour towards the east. This tapers off as the launch site latitude increases, IIRC, it's a function of the cosine of the latitude. So Cape Canaveral gets a ~800 nmph boost. The amount of assistance this gives any particular launch depends on the inclination of the orbit...the 'tilt' of the orbit plane relative to the equatorial plane. The more inclination, the less benefit from the Earth's spin. Geostationary orbits (those which allow a satellite to hang stationary relative to the Earth's surface) are probably the most valuable; these have zero inclination and thus benefit the most from a lower-latitude launch site. Sun-Synchronous orbits, which are used by imaging satellites, have inclinations over 90 degrees and thus see no benefit from equatorial launch. The US uses launch sites in California and Alaska for these types of launches. Airplanes fly relative to the atmosphere. Since the atmosphere moves with the Earth's spin, aircraft see no advantage from eastward flight. Ron Wanttaja |
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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 |
#8
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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. Is the wind outside blowing at 1000 mph right now? The atmosphere, the medium in which we fly, is spinning with the planet. |
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He asked why this didn't benefit
east to west plane travel timewise and hurt west to east. The short answer is that although one =is= moving faster going eastwards (due to the addition of the spin of the earth), your destination is also scurrying away from you at the same speed. It cancels out. There are teeny effects (having to do with orbital mechanics) but those are not the ones that are important in understsanding the question. The flaw in your friend's reasoning (the reason for his question) has to do with using different frames of reference for different parts of the question - i.e. the earth is =not= spinning with respect to its surface (the ground "stays put" with respect to itself!) but it =is= spinning with respect to its center. We navigate with respect to the earth's surface, not the earth's center. We fly with respect to the wind, which moves over the earth's surface, which is what leads to the illusion of flying sideways (crabbing into the wind). In this respect, one's destination really =is= slipping away below you! The "dropping something from a moving vehicle" does work quite well as an analogy. Acceleration (from the airplane engine) has little to do with it. The key is that although the frame of reference (the earth's surface, or the vehicle) is moving, it is not moving with respect to itself, since by definition, it =is= the frame of reference. Now, this introduces some additional issues, which are the ones normally referred to as the coriolis effect. Since the earth is roughly spheerical and rotating, different parts of the earth are moving (w.r.t. its center) at a different speed. The poles are hardly moving, and the equator is moving fast (which is why, all things equal, you'd be lighter at the equator). If you fire a cannon from the North Pole (in the only direction possible - South), the cannonball will not be in contact with the earth's surface, and as it travels towards the equator, the earth will be spinning out from under it. Now while the muzzle of the cannon may have been moving (one revolution per day, maybe fifty feet per day, as the cannon is attached to the earth's surface), this is next to nothing compared to the speed the equator is moving. The Sahara desert and the Amazon River will both be scooting out from under this cannonball at a thousand miles per hour. You, riding on the cannonball, will get a good sense of the earth spinning under you. However, anybody looking up at the cannonball from the ground will see the same thing in reverse - the cannonball will be slipping the other way through the air - east to west, just like the sun and moon rise. The closer to the equator, the bigger the effect, and that is what gives rise to the large scale air circulations in the earth. 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. |
#10
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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. It does affect us to some degree. We refer to it as "prevailing winds". Remember that we are sitting in air above the earth that is moving (mostly ) with the earth so the difference would not be as great as your friend may imagine. The difference between the two rates comes from the friction between the winds and the earth. -Robert |
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