• @whotookkarl
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    83 hours ago

    If you want to just pick the fastest velocity we can measure and we’re currently moving at thanks to dark energy the Milky Way galaxy is moving away from other distant galaxies faster than the speed of light.

  • @taiyang
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    115 hours ago

    Man, it’d be so funny if the entire atmosphere just straight up locked in place. Heck, forget rotation, have it keep it’s X/Y/Z in the universe static and just straight up disappear as our solar system moves on.

    • @Idreamofcheesy
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      245 hours ago

      Not quite. When you’re rotating, you are constantly accelerating in a tangent direction to the diameter. So the poster is right that we should be feeling a force shooting us away from the center of earth.

      Except the force of gravity cancels out the centripetal force and then some.

      So [force of gravity] - [centripetal force of Earth’s rotation] = 9.8m/s^2

      • @cynar
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        114 hours ago

        The difference is about 0.5%. A mass weighing 100kg at the north pole would only weigh 99.5kg at the equator. Most of the difference is the centerfugal force of the earth’s rotation.

        I’ve not checked the numbers, but apparently it’s detectable in Olympic sports. More height records get broken at equatorial latitudes that higher ones.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 hours ago

          Interesting, would the muscles of someone living far away from the equator be stronger in general than compared to someone with the same genes / lifestyle on the equator?

          • @cynar
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            129 minutes ago

            0.5% is so tiny that it disappears into the noise. It’s a 1 in 200 difference. In theory, it would make a difference. In practice, you won’t be able to measure it. Other confounding factors would bury it.

      • @eating3645
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        45 hours ago

        The fact that your units are units of acceleration proves the guys point, no?

        • @Idreamofcheesy
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          35 hours ago

          It sounded like the guy meant the 1700km/h is a velocity, not an acceleration, which is why we don’t feel the force of acceleration.

          I was pointing out that spinning is acceleration, just in this case we can’t feel it due to other forces.

      • @db2
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        25 hours ago

        What are those pre-math numbers though? How screwed would we be if rotation doubled or stopped (regardless of the virtual impossibility)?

        • @Idreamofcheesy
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          65 hours ago

          Have you seen the elementary school experiment where you spin an egg on a flat surface, then you stop the egg and let it go and the then the egg starts spinning again?

          If the earth suddenly stopped spinning, the atmosphere would still be spinning at 1700km/h.

          A cat 5 hurricane has wind speeds of 253km/h. So we’d be boned.

  • UnfortunateShort
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    54 hours ago

    The earth isn’t rotating and shaped like a pyramid

    • GHiLA
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      126 minutes ago

      It’s not spinning AND shaped like a pyramid?

      …where does the turtle go?

  • @[email protected]
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    367 hours ago

    1675 + 10km/h

    1675 + 100km/h

    1675km/h

    Turns out that 1675km/h is the magic number, anything above that is dangerous

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      Does that mean that cars bend the space around them instead of moving and the speed numbers on them are fake?

    • @ch00f
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      44 hours ago

      I remember learning that before the invention of the locomotive, people thought that 30mph was some kind of barrier that the human body could not survive.

      • DreamButt
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        106 hours ago

        They let scientists do drugs?

      • @Stiffneckedppl
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        16 hours ago

        Well maybe we should just turn the roller coasters around and go the other direction.

  • @Fedizen
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    23 hours ago

    I was about to say gravity is stronger but it has already been said.

  • @Unknown1234_5
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    02 hours ago

    Ik this is a joke but if anyone is wondering it’s because units of linear motion (km/h, mph, etc.) do not accurately describe rotation. Rotational units like rpm are much better as linear units give a misleadingly large (though technically correct) number.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 hour ago

      If anyone is wondering it’s actually because of frame of reference. The first two images have speeds in relation to the rotation of earth, the last imagine uses a different frame of reference. If you put the last image in the same frame of reference as the first two images the number there would be 0km/h, because it would be moving in relation to itself.

      • @mkwt
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        11 hour ago

        It’s actually because the thing that makes you make those faces is the acceleration, not the speed.

        All three reference frames shown are accelerated, non inertial frames. But the first two have “fictitious” centrifugal accelerations somewhere around 0.5-2.5 g. The third frame has a detectable centrifugal acceleration, but it’s like 0.003 g or something, and can be lumped in with gravity for many types of problems.

        • @[email protected]
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          246 minutes ago

          It’s actually because of wind resistance, the air is moving the same speed as the ground when the earth turns so you don’t feel it.

          (don’t @ me I’m just following what I recognized to be a humorous pattern of technically correct "well actually"s)

  • @[email protected]
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    76 hours ago

    That’s cause earth isn’t actually rotating at all. The entire universe rotates around earth.

  • DreamButt
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    76 hours ago

    Space doesn’t have air dummy

  • @[email protected]
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    86 hours ago

    Maybe my math is wrong but: The Earth’s radius is about 6,371 kilometers. With this large radius and a 24-hour rotation period, the centripetal acceleration at the equator is only about 0.034 m/s². This is tiny compared to Earth’s gravitational acceleration of 9.8 m/s². So the centripetal effect is only about 0.3% of gravity’s effect.

    • @perviouslyiner
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      5 hours ago

      40,075,000m circumference / 86,400s = 463m/s?

      • @[email protected]
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        4 hours ago

        Yes, that is the speed you’re going, then the acceleration you experience due to the change in direction as the earths surface revolves about an axis is a = v²/r. R being the radius of the earth. This gets us our small acceleration value.

        You do experience this small acceleration as a very small reduction in weight. You actually weigh more at the poles than the equator. You don’t feel the velocity at all, as the whole planet is moving with you.