
Crossbow said:
If the Earth were flat, then these distances would be equal.
However, since the Earth is round the impact distance will be less than the release distance.
Rocky said:
The rotation of the earth will affect the results in a small but important way.
Crossbow said:Take an object to a fixed distance above the ground and let it drop being careful not to let wind or other actions change interfere with its motion. Then, move some horizontal distance away and let the object drop to the ground in the same way.
DickK said:Is it permissible to use another well-formed idea as a basis for proof, or is that constrained by the "no proof by example" thing? Say, notions of Newtonian gravity and mass, that provide a system of models that are understood well enough to propose that, a spherical Earth would permit activities like running and jumping in the way that we observe them, and that a flat earth, er, would not.
No, I'm asking you, not them. Your results will help form my answer. Go find a tennis ball and measure it for me, please. A cricket or hockey or baseball or something of that size will be just as sufficient.Kumar said:You are just repeating my question in other way. However you have not mentioned 'per- Km,meter,inch,cm,mm etc. so that others to measure & give reply.
Ahh HA!xouper said:No fight. But how about a conversation to sort out, or clarify, what we are trying to say and possibly reach a mutual understanding?
So yer saying there is a net force downward (due to gravity) and thus the airplane is accelerating in that direction?
[obligatory pedantic content]
BTW, typical gross weight of a 1969 Cessna 150 is around 1600 lbs., and sitting in the hangar with no fuel, occupants or baggage, the empty weight is about 1100 lbs. Give or take a few.
[/pedant]
CurtC said:TillEulenspiegel, you gonna tell the rest of the story, or leave everybody hanging? There's a memorable punch line that goes with it.
If I may be permitted to rephrase Kumar's question, he is asking if you extend a line out over the ocean (tangent to where you are standing), how far above sea level will the end of a one kilometer line be? I believe that is a reasonable interpretation of his use of the word "slope" in the manner he asked the question.Zep: No, I'm asking you, not them. Your results will help form my answer. Go find a tennis ball and measure it for me, please. A cricket or hockey or baseball or something of that size will be just as sufficient.
Will you actually do this and report back to us all what "slope" you measure for one of these objects? Not just sit there in front of a computer and waffle on? Yes?
Apparently so.TillEulenspiegel: Ahh HA! not only do You start to reveal the approximation of your age , I see that your humor organ is equal in size to mine.
Seriously, Xouper, you are making it a REASONABLE question and would be expecting a REASONABLE answer. And I'm sure we could calculate acceptable stuff by that or any of the other REASONABLE methods proposed above.xouper said:If I may be permitted to rephrase Kumar's question, he is asking if you extend a line out over the ocean (tangent to where you are standing), how far above sea level will the end of a one kilometer line be? I believe that is a reasonable interpretation of his use of the word "slope" in the manner he asked the question.
You may argue that this "slope" varies with line length and you would be correct. You are also correct that a curve has no overall slope. But it does have an instaneous slope at any given point, and that is what I think Kumar had in mind - what is the instantaneous slope of a point on the ocean one kilometer away.
So Carl asks, "And what is that turtle on?"TillEulenspiegel said:Cute anicdote ( paraphrased from memory )
C.Sagan gives a lecture at the end an old lady comes up and tells him his model of the universe is poppycock, " everyone knows that the world is supported on the back of turtles". So Carl asks what is the last turtle resting on?", "why another turtle of course!"