All Questions
Tagged with relative-motion earth
25
questions
3
votes
1
answer
157
views
CMB dipole anisotropy maping to earth visualization
I do not see how this dipole anisotropy is due to the motion of the earth (and thus a doppler effect). Does anyone have a visualization of how this maps onto the earth and the motion of the earth such ...
0
votes
3
answers
1k
views
Does Coriolis effect change the direction of an object moving parallel to equator, say along the tropic of Cancer?
It is usually said that the Coriolis force deflects a horizontally moving object to its right in the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern hemisphere, and an object at the equator will ...
2
votes
2
answers
127
views
Can we prove the Earth rotation with a disk mounted in its center on a frictionless axis?
Can somebody prove the rotation of Earth if it places an uniform disk with a hole in its the center on an axis and orient it paralelly to Sun ecliptical disk?Just assure himself that the disk on the ...
3
votes
2
answers
60
views
Why don't hovercrafts move West relative to the Earth [duplicate]
Suppose that there is a hovercraft floating a few centimetres above the Earth's surface. As it is disconnected from the Earth, which is spinning from West to East, shouldn't it appear to move East to ...
2
votes
4
answers
3k
views
Why does hot air balloon rotate with the earth?
This might be a silly question but I have been wondering this for quite a while.
When a hot air balloon is flying in the sky, the earth is rotating at the speed of 1000 mph. Why does it move along ...
2
votes
1
answer
116
views
Why ball fall at same location from where we throw it? [duplicate]
I have a silly question. As we all know earth is rotates at a speed of 460 m per sec. So if I throw a ball in the air for 10 sec than the ball must fall 4600 m away from me but these does not happen ...
-1
votes
2
answers
2k
views
Does a helicopter that simply hovers remain in the same spot on earth? [duplicate]
Ignoring statistical variation in wind, will a helicopter that only applies force perpendicular to a perfectly sphere earth remain in the exact same spot relative to the earth?
I am arguing with ...
0
votes
0
answers
30
views
Vertically move in a helicopter to go somewhere on Earth [duplicate]
Is it possible to go from point A to point B (which are on same latitude) by hovering above A and wait till the earth rotates to point B below and then come down vertically?
I believe there would be ...
3
votes
2
answers
716
views
Is one side of earth faster at night and slower at daytime?
I'm reading Physics for Entertainment by Yakov Perelman and in it he says under "When we move around the sun faster" that at midnight the speed of the rotation of the earth is added to that of earth's ...
1
vote
4
answers
209
views
Question about spinning Earth
The earth spins on its axis at 1674 km/h from west to east. Would it not imply that an airplane flying eastbound at 500 km/h would cover a distance of 500 kilometres in an hour while another plane ...
-1
votes
1
answer
36
views
Revolution of the Earth [duplicate]
Good day, it seems easy but I still find it difficult to understand why we return to the same spot when we jump despite the Earth revolving beneath us. Can someone explain?
0
votes
2
answers
451
views
Earth's rotation and a helicopter [duplicate]
Imagine a helicopter that took off from point A on the ground and goes vertically in the air to a certain fixed point B in the atmospheric area at a certain fixed altitude with enough fuel to stay ...
-2
votes
1
answer
99
views
Motion of earth wrt. objects?
To "outrace the Sun" (or rather the earth) in Arctic latitudes, one
can go much more slowly. Above Novaya Zemlya, on the 77th parallel, a
plane doing about 450 km. p.h. would cover as much as a ...
1
vote
1
answer
1k
views
Does aeroplane moving against Earth's rotation cause relative wind (assuming otherwise a quiet weather outside)?
Although, I know some answers, I need more affirmative and accurate answers.
Why is the journey time from London to Singapore less compared to Singapore to London? Is it because of Earth's rotation ...
2
votes
3
answers
8k
views
How high do you need to be so as to not rotate along with Earth?
So, I saw this meme about some minister commenting that the Earth doesn't rotate, for if it did then planes only need to be in the air and the destination city would come to it. I know this is absurd ...