failexam said:
We all know that Newton's laws of motion are only valid in an inertial frame of reference.
Our Earth is a rotating frame of reference, so Newton's laws of motion must not work anywhere on the surface of the planet. Do you agree?
Yes, of course. For observers fixed on the surface of the earth, Newton's Laws don't strictly apply. The two pseudoforces, centrifugal force and Coriolis force, don't satisfy the third law of motion.
Newton's Third Law of Motion (Principia, Law III) states:
To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction; or the mutual actions of two bodies upon each other are always equal and directed to contrary parts.
Read the third law carefully. According to the Third Law of motion, every force has to be associated with two bodies. If the bodies weren't paired, then the forces couldn't be paired.
Consider anybody in the surface frame. Neither the centrifugal force nor the Coriolis force has a corresponding body to which a mutual action can be applied. From the standpoint of an inertial frame, the motions caused by these two pseudoforces are caused by a force on the observer, not on another body.
Violations in the Third Law are apparent when bodies are unpaired. If a force is exerted on one body and there is not corresponding body to which the opposite force can be applied, then the Third Law is violated.
As an example, consider the bob on a Foucault pendulum. At any point except on the equator, the Coriolis force makes the bob precess. However, there is no body corresponding to the bob upon which a mutual force can be applied.
In an inertial reference frame, there is no Coriolis force. The apparent motion of the Foucault pendulum doesn't occur. It is due to a force on the observer that is fixed to the surface of the earth.
For the POV observer in orbit around the earth, neither centrifugal force nor Coriolis force exists. There are only contact forces and gravitational forces. However, most humans observe from the POV of an local observer fixed to the surface of the earth. Therefore, the third law takes a slight beating in terms of local observation.