davefoc said:
New question: How much is the penny going to be displaced because of the gravitational pull of the empire state building?
Very, VERY little.
davefoc said:
New question: How much is the penny going to be displaced because of the gravitational pull of the empire state building?
This is where davefoc should go woo-woo and defend his result despite evidence to the contrary. Invent fudge factors justified by new and undetectable forces (use of the word quantum will come in handy here). Accuse the others of being muddled in scientific dogmatism. Tell them how Galileo was ridiculed when he dropped things from tall buildings and got the "wrong answers" and won't they be the stupids when you are proven correct.davefoc wrote:
So at this point what is davefoc to conclude? That he is wrong and the rest of the world is right or that he is right and the rest of the world just doesn't see this quite correctly?
Virtually identical, but I have southward displacement.davefoc said:Wayne,
I'd really like to see you try your equation out on a different latitudes so I can see how what it predicts compared to my calculations.
lat tilt displacement
0 0 0
10 0.0337 8.8252
20 0.0634 16.5910
30 0.0854 22.3632
40 0.0972 25.4447
50 0.0972 25.4600
60 0.0856 22.4017
70 0.0635 16.6348
80 0.0338 8.8538
90 0 0
So I'm pretty sure that the object will not be deflected north or south of the building's base, except for an exceedingly small southward Coriolis force due to the object's small velocity eastward, which in turn is caused by the Coriolis force due to its significant velocity toward the earth's axis.QUOTE]
And I think he was right.
The 25.701 inches that Ceptimus's simulation determined for the southward motion is almost exactly offset by the northward lean of the building. I got 25.699 inches for the offset of a plumb bob hanging 381 meters above the ground at a latitude of 40.5 degrees based on the vector addition of gravity and centrifugal force.
The key thing that I didn't get was that the coin continues to experience centrifugal force even after it is released.
I'm not sure I understand this. The coin stops experience no centripetal force and thus orbits the middle of the spheroid earth. The building continues to experience a centripetal force, that keeps in orbiting the axis of rotation in the x-y plane.davefoc said:The key thing that I didn't get was that the coin continues to experience centrifugal force even after it is released.
[pedantic mode]Centrifugal force is an "apparent" force, so when we talk about this, we should talk about centripetal force. When you do a loop on a roller coaster, you don't push down on the seat, the seat pushes up on you. It just so happens having your chair pushed into you, feels like you are being pushed into your chair.[/pedantic mode]davefoc said:2. The reason the earth points north is that centrifugal force caused by its rotation around the earth changes the direction slightly of the downward force on the building.