- #1
Jonsson
- 79
- 0
Hello there,
I was taught:
[tex]a = {v^2 \over R}[/tex]. I substitute [tex]v[/tex] for the speed of the rotating Earth at the equator, and the radius, [tex]R = 6378m[/tex]. And I get [tex]a = 0.03 \rm m/s^2[/tex].
It looks like the equation [tex]a = {v^2 \over R}[/tex] may incorrect. Why am I taught this equation in University if it is false?
Thank you for your time.
Kind regards,
Marius
I was taught:
[tex]a = {v^2 \over R}[/tex]. I substitute [tex]v[/tex] for the speed of the rotating Earth at the equator, and the radius, [tex]R = 6378m[/tex]. And I get [tex]a = 0.03 \rm m/s^2[/tex].
It looks like the equation [tex]a = {v^2 \over R}[/tex] may incorrect. Why am I taught this equation in University if it is false?
Thank you for your time.
Kind regards,
Marius
Last edited: