Question re. flying against Earth's rotation

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If an aircraft could match the Earth's rotational speed and fly against it, passengers would not experience significant physical effects, but they might feel slightly heavier due to the lack of centrifugal force that typically counteracts gravity during circular motion. The scenery would appear to speed by, but the aircraft would remain stationary relative to the ground. Fuel consumption could increase slightly, but this effect is minor compared to other factors like air currents. The discussion also highlights that geostationary satellites match the Earth's angular velocity, not the tangential speed at the surface. Overall, the concept illustrates the complexities of motion relative to Earth's rotation without major impacts on the aircraft or passengers.
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What would happen if an aircraft was fast enough to match the speed of the rotation of the Earth and it decided to fly against it matching that exact speed (earth's rotation)?

I would imagine it would look like Earth was speeding up but would there be any other physical effects on the aircraft? The passengers?
 
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KhalBrogo said:
What would happen if an aircraft was fast enough to match the speed of the rotation of the Earth and it decided to fly against it matching that exact speed (earth's rotation)?

what do you think or expect to happen ?
The geostationary satellites actually match the speed of Earth's rotation and the astronaut's experiences are well documented...weightless ness etc.
 
The aircraft traveling over the surface of the Earth at speed v just means that the scenery looks like it is going past at speed v.
It does not matter what that speed is (as long at it is well below the speed of light) or what direction you travel in.
Since the motion is circular, you do get pseudogravity effects and stresses on the airframe that depend on speed.
Maintaining the motion at a constant distance from the surface means the aircraft is not in freefall.

Note: the speed of the ground about the rotation axis depends on latitude, it can be quite slow.
You could go to someplace close to the north or south (rotation) pole and fly a model aircraft about and see what happens.
But it is quite easy to imagine.
 
The Sun will not move in the sky and you arrive at the same local time as you depart.
I believe Concorde used to do that regularly on LHR-JFK route.
 
Simon Bridge said:
Maintaining the motion at a constant distance from the surface means the aircraft is not in freefall.
That is not the criterion of being in freefall, although the conclusion happens to be right in this case.
 
Yes - I was not using that as the criterion but as an important detail, along with all the others, that can be used to inform an investigation.
To be pedantic: the question implies an aircraft flying as is usual for aircraft.
At the kinds of altitudes aircraft usually fly, the indicated speed does not suggest an orbit, yet the altitude is implied constant - therefore, gravity is not the only force on the aircraft vis: not free fall. Better?

Since this is circular motion we can expect centrifugal effects to be present ... but would we expect "weightlessness"?
 
KhalBrogo said:
What would happen if an aircraft was fast enough to match the speed of the rotation of the Earth and it decided to fly against it matching that exact speed (earth's rotation)?

I would imagine it would look like Earth was speeding up but would there be any other physical effects on the aircraft? The passengers?
No physical effects. Note: airplanes can do this. The rotation speed of Earth is about 1,000 mph at the equator and gets slower as you go further north/south. The Concorde went faster than that and military fighters do too.
 
Simon Bridge said:
Since this is circular motion we can expect centrifugal effects to be present ... but would we expect "weightlessness"?

Wouldn't this rather be a lack of circular motion? Traveling with the Earth's surface would be circular motion, and i'd expect some centrifugal force to partially cancel out gravity, that's why the Earth bulges at the equator. A plane flying against the rotation of the Earth would not experience this force, so I'd expect the plane and passengers to weigh a bit more then they would at rest with respect to the surface.
 
KhalBrogo said:
What would happen if an aircraft was fast enough to match the speed of the rotation of the Earth and it decided to fly against it matching that exact speed (earth's rotation)?

I would imagine it would look like Earth was speeding up but would there be any other physical effects on the aircraft? The passengers?

Go to the north or south pole and run in circles around it.
 
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  • #10
russ_watters said:
No physical effects.
There is a small effect on fuel consumption, but it's negligible compared to air currents etc.
 
  • #11
It is not clear what situation you have in mind because you don't mention in what reference frame is the speed of the airplane considered.
But if you think about a situation where the airplane is stationary above a point on the Earth's surface there may be a problem.
As the atmosphere moves pretty much with the Earth, the airplane will be stationary in respect to the air so there will be not much lift to support the airplane.
Unless there is a strong wind blowing in the right direction.
 
  • #12
KhalBrogo said:
I would imagine it would look like Earth was speeding up
nasu said:
if you think about a situation where the airplane is stationary above a point on the Earth's surface
Pretty sure not what he means.
 
  • #13
mrspeedybob said:
Traveling with the Earth's surface would be circular motion, and i'd expect some centrifugal force to partially cancel out gravity, that's why the Earth bulges at the equator. A plane flying against the rotation of the Earth would not experience this force, so I'd expect the plane and passengers to weigh a bit more then they would at rest with respect to the surface.
0.3%. A good scale can measure this, but it is still a small effect. Go to the pole if you want to increase your weight even more (because you are also closer to the center of Earth there).
 
  • #14
russ_watters said:
No physical effects.

The centrifugal component of the normal gravity changes (slightly) when traveling east or west, so everything else being equal there should be an effect, even if very minor. For instance, flying west on the equator with enough speed that the centrifugal term is zero should mean around 0.3% less weight and therefore less drag and less fuel consumption, again everything being equal.
 
  • #15
Filip Larsen said:
The centrifugal component of the normal gravity changes (slightly) when traveling east or west, so everything else being equal there should be an effect, even if very minor. For instance, flying west on the equator with enough speed that the centrifugal term is zero should mean around 0.3% less weight and therefore less drag and less fuel consumption, again everything being equal.
See also:
http://naca.central.cranfield.ac.uk/reports/arc/rm/3680.pdf
 
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  • #16
Delta Kilo said:
The Sun will not move in the sky and you arrive at the same local time as you depart.
I believe Concorde used to do that regularly on LHR-JFK route.

agree...concorde answers this question
 
  • #17
Brian Cox hosts a show called: Forces of Nature
and in the 2 episode :Somewhere in Space-time he does just what you asked by getting into a jet and follows the sun till it comes back up throw the horizon its a really good watch if you can find it on the web
 
  • #18
Simon Bridge said:
Since this is circular motion we can expect centrifugal effects to be present ... but would we expect "weightlessness"?
You would need to be at the same height as a geostationary satellite for weightlessness with that particular angular velocity. (360° per 24 hours). Which is why the satellite is put at that particular height.
 
  • #19
KhalBrogo said:
What would happen if an aircraft was fast enough to match the speed of the rotation of the Earth and it decided to fly against it matching that exact speed (earth's rotation)?

I would imagine it would look like Earth was speeding up but would there be any other physical effects on the aircraft? The passengers?
As pointed out, there would be no centrifugal effect offsetting gravity so it be a bit heavier. If it was a rocket ship, it would also take a bit more fuel to get into orbit flying against the Earth's rotation. I expect this is why rockets are launched west to east in low latitudes and why, for example, the Virgin Galactic plane flies west to east near the equator when launching its orbital vehicle into space.

AM
 
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  • #20
drvrm said:
The geostationary satellites actually match the speed of Earth's rotation

They match the angular velocity of the Earth, but not the tangential velocity at the surface.
 
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