Influence of Centrifugal force in 'g'

AI Thread Summary
Centrifugal force due to Earth's rotation at the equator slightly reduces the effective gravitational acceleration ('g') experienced. This effect, while minimal—less than one percent—can influence precise measurements, such as track records. The centrifugal force alters local pressure balance and contributes to the Earth's equatorial bulge, increasing the distance to the center of the Earth. Although centrifugal force is not a real force, its effects are observable in rotating systems. Overall, the logic regarding its influence on gravitational acceleration is correct, albeit with a very small impact.
Guiga
Messages
5
Reaction score
0
Influence of "Centrifugal" force in 'g'

Hello everyone,

I was wondering one of these days if the 'centrifugal' force due to the rotation of the Earth in the Equator could cause any difference in the value of the gravitational acceleration; namely it would be supposedly less than the real value because we experience it pushing us outward, in opposite direction to gravity.

I know that if it has an implication it is probably very tiny compared to the gravitational field of the Earth but I just want to know if the logic is correct.

ps. I am aware that the centrifugal force doesn't exist but we experience it; the simple rotating bucket proves it.

Thanks in advance!
 
Physics news on Phys.org


You're absolutely right. It is a simple calculation to perform as-well: assume you're on the equator, find the centrifugal force using the radius of the Earth and the rotational velocity (e.g. using the length of a day).
 


Yes.
And "g" values already include the contribution from centrifugal forces.
 


What's more, the centrifugal force contributes to altering the local effective g in two ways-- one way is that if you interpret yourself as being in an inertial frame (when you aren't), you need to include the "centrifugal acceleration" directly into a reduction of the locally measured g, as mentioned above. But also, this modification alters the pressure balance inside the Earth and causes the equator to bulge out a little. That increases the distance to the center, so it actually reduces the purely gravitational contribution to g (though only a little bit, less than a percent). However, it's enough to affect things like track records, when they are measured to high precision.
 
Hi there, im studying nanoscience at the university in Basel. Today I looked at the topic of intertial and non-inertial reference frames and the existence of fictitious forces. I understand that you call forces real in physics if they appear in interplay. Meaning that a force is real when there is the "actio" partner to the "reactio" partner. If this condition is not satisfied the force is not real. I also understand that if you specifically look at non-inertial reference frames you can...
I have recently been really interested in the derivation of Hamiltons Principle. On my research I found that with the term ##m \cdot \frac{d}{dt} (\frac{dr}{dt} \cdot \delta r) = 0## (1) one may derivate ##\delta \int (T - V) dt = 0## (2). The derivation itself I understood quiet good, but what I don't understand is where the equation (1) came from, because in my research it was just given and not derived from anywhere. Does anybody know where (1) comes from or why from it the...
Back
Top