Validity of netwon's laws on the earth's surface

In summary, Newton's laws of motion are only valid in an inertial frame of reference and do not apply on the surface of the rotating Earth. To account for the effects of the Earth's rotation, fictitious forces must be added to modify Newton's laws. However, for many purposes, these effects can be neglected and the Earth's surface can be treated as approximately inertial. While the Earth is constantly rotating and orbiting around the Sun, we do not feel any forces acting upon us due to our rotation with the Earth. This is similar to astronauts in free-fall in space. However, without the addition of fictitious forces, Newton's laws are not valid in a rotating or accelerating frame.
  • #1
spaghetti3451
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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?
 
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  • #2
To include the effects of the Earth's rotation, one must modify Newton's laws by the addition of various 'fictitious' forces. (As with any non-inertial frame.) For many purposes, these effects can be neglected and you can treat the Earth's surface as being approximately inertial.
 
  • #3
failexam said:
We all know that Newton's laws of motion are only valid in an inertial frame of reference.
What's this inertial frame of reference thing to which you are alluding? Name one. :devil:

It's obviously not a frame fixed with respect to the rotating Earth; it's a rotating frame. A non-rotating frame with origin at the center of the Earth doesn't work either. The Earth as a whole is accelerating toward the Sun, the Moon, Jupiter, Venus, etc. How about the International Celestial Reference Frame, the ICRF? It's constructed based on physical measurements so as to be non-rotating, but those measurements aren't perfect. The ICRF almost certainly is rotating by some currently unobservable amount. The ICRF with its origin at the solar system barycenter is an accelerating reference frame; the solar system is orbiting the Milky Way. What about a frame with origin at the center of the Milky Way? The Milky Way is accelerating, too.

There is no such thing as a true inertial frame, at least not one that we can find. There are instead frames that are approximately inertial. The ICRF is approximately valid as an inertial frame out to Pluto and beyond. An Earth-centered inertial frame works quite nicely for many Earth-bound applications, but there are times when one needs to account for the frame's acceleration. Even an Earth-fixed frame works quite nicely as an inertial frame for applications in which velocities, relative displacements, and time intervals are small.
 
  • #4
Thanks for the help!
 
  • #5
Yes the frame of reference (earth) is spinning all the time, but we are also spinning with it, so we are always in the same position relative to the frame of reference, and this is why we don't see any change, as an observer. The Earth is also rotating around the sun, but we are also rotating with it, so we also feel no forces acting upon us, even when there are forces. This is like when astronauts are in free-fall in space. They are not experiencing zero gravity. They are merely falling with their frame of reference, falling along the curve of the earth, similar to how we are falling along the curve of the sun, and along a curved circular path as we spin around on Earth's axis. Newton's laws are valid within a frame of reference (relative to that frame of reference). Therefore they will not be affected if there is no change in our motion relative to our frame of reference, so I don't see why they wouldn't be valid on the Earth's surface.
 
  • #6
Nobelian said:
Yes the frame of reference (earth) is spinning all the time, but we are also spinning with it, so we are always in the same position relative to the frame of reference, and this is why we don't see any change, as an observer.
When we look at a star, we see that star as undergoing uniform circular motion with an angular velocity of 360 degrees per day. If Newton's 1st and 2nd laws are valid, that uniform circular motion means there must exist some centripetal force that causes this observed motion. Suppose the star is a 1 solar mass star and is 10 light years away. That's a centripetal force of 1039 Newtons! Now compare to an observer on some non-rotating platform out in space. That person sees that same star as motionless. That means no net force. So which is right, a force of 1039 Newtons directed toward the Earth, or no force at all?

The answer is both if you create some fictitious forces to account for that perceived acceleration in the rotating frame.

The Earth is also rotating around the sun, but we are also rotating with it, so we also feel no forces acting upon us, even when there are forces.
The word is orbiting or revolving, not rotating. It's an important distinction.

BTW, we do feel a force. It's called the tide.

This is like when astronauts are in free-fall in space. They are not experiencing zero gravity. They are merely falling with their frame of reference, falling along the curve of the earth, similar to how we are falling along the curve of the sun, and along a curved circular path as we spin around on Earth's axis. Newton's laws are valid within a frame of reference (relative to that frame of reference).
No, they aren't, at least not without fictitious forces. It's an accelerating frame.
Therefore they will not be affected if there is no change in our motion relative to our frame of reference, so I don't see why they wouldn't be valid on the Earth's surface.
Without the aid of these fictitious forces, Newton's 1st and 2nd laws are not valid in a rotating or accelerating frame. Now there's another problem: There is no equal but opposite force to these fictitious forces.

These fictitious forces can be a very useful fiction. For example, it would be downright impossible to simulate the weather from the perspective of an inertial frame.
 
  • #7
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.
 
  • #8
D H said:
These fictitious forces can be a very useful fiction. For example, it would be downright impossible to simulate the weather from the perspective of an inertial frame.
This is incorrect. Of course one could simulate the weather from the perspective of an inertial frame. One includes the contact force of the Earth's surface, the frictional force due to the atmosphere's viscosity, and the other "real forces". However, the acceleration of the Earth's surface is not zero in the inertial frame.
In the end, one has to subtract the "background motion" of the Earth's surface. However, none of this violates Newton's Laws.
In actual practice, the problem is simplified if the acceleration of the Earth's surface is arbitrarily set to zero. No "background motion" has to be subtracted. The price of this simplification is that the Coriolis force and the centrifugal force has to be set to nonzero values. Thus, this is really a noninertial frame.
General relativity complicates this view of nature, somewhat. However, it ends up the same. The surface of the Earth is not a geodesic. So Newton's Laws can't be valid even as an approximation from the standpoint of a surface frame.
 
  • #9
Darwin123 said:
This is incorrect. Of course one could simulate the weather from the perspective of an inertial frame.
In theory, yes. In practice, no. Weather and climate simulations need to produce timely forecasts, the forecasts need to be reasonably accurate, and the programs must live within the constraints of a real computer. The final item is tough enough as is. Weather and climate programs can stress even the most powerful supercomputers. Your inertial frame weather simulation would violate at least one of these requirements. A non-rotating, Earth-centered frame is not inertial. It is an accelerating frame, and weather forecast programs do account for tidal forces. A weather forecast program that does its computations in the International Celestial Reference Frame is fundamentally broken. It won't satisfy any of those essential requirements.
 

What are Newton's laws?

Newton's laws are three fundamental principles of classical mechanics that describe the behavior of objects in motion. The first law states that an object at rest will remain at rest and an object in motion will remain in motion at a constant velocity unless acted upon by an external force. The second law states that the acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on it and inversely proportional to its mass. The third law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Do Newton's laws apply to all objects on earth's surface?

Yes, Newton's laws apply to all objects on earth's surface as long as they are not moving at speeds close to the speed of light or in extreme gravitational fields. These laws are considered to be universal and have been tested and proven to be accurate for objects on earth's surface.

Are there any exceptions to Newton's laws on earth's surface?

There are no known exceptions to Newton's laws on earth's surface. However, in certain extreme conditions, such as near the speed of light or in a strong gravitational field, the laws may need to be modified or replaced by the principles of relativity or quantum mechanics.

How were Newton's laws tested on earth's surface?

Newton's laws have been tested and confirmed through countless experiments and observations. For example, the first law was observed by Galileo when he noticed that a ball rolling on a flat surface would continue to roll at a constant speed unless acted upon by a force. The second law has been tested through various experiments involving objects of different masses and forces acting upon them. The third law has been observed through experiments with colliding objects and the equal and opposite forces they exert on each other.

How important are Newton's laws in modern science?

Newton's laws are considered to be the foundation of classical mechanics and are still widely used and applied in modern science and engineering. They are essential in understanding the behavior of objects in motion and are the basis for many other scientific principles and laws. Without Newton's laws, many technological advancements and discoveries in the field of physics would not have been possible.

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