Tide said:
You're thinking about the Coriolis force? That's not the explanation. It has more to do with the detailed shape of the drains and pipes.
Yes - coriolis "force" - that's what I meant, but I wasn't sure if the spelling is correct so I didn't write it...
That's what they told - the moment of force already existing in the movement of water creates swirling (not coriolis effect), and shape of object that contains water, BUT!..
...What would happen if you would have completely round container, and a hole at the exact center of it (theoretical container, perfect shape), in perfectly still conditions around it (no additional forces of any kind except those Earth makes... you know what I mean)? Then you open the hole on the bottom of it, and the water leaks out creating cone of air toward the hole. Would there be vortex or not?
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It is hard for me to accept that Earth's gravity/coriolis actually does not create this swirling effect, because:
1.) I remember that when i tried to spin the water to the other direction it didn't do the work (water still wanted to go the way it goes).
2.) I think there is TOO logical explanation for it in context of gravity/coriolis effect: points on the Earth's surface spin in different speeds (because Earth does one full circle around itself in 24 hours; latitude of Earth-ball at poles is smallest, and on the equator it's at its greatest - so points on the Earth nearer to the equator travel greater distances (e.i. their speed is greater)). Now at every volume of water on Earth there is one side that is nearer to the equator, and one side that is further. The greater the distance between those two, the effect will be more obvious, but that's not the only factor - the greater the change of weight water volume loses, greater the effect (that's the other factor). It doesn't matter how small this difference of speeds is, because it's enough that there IS difference, and the weight loss would make it greater (because the force is same, and weight becomes smaller which results in greater speed!). The spinning happens because water with greater speed (nearer to the equator) is pulled toward area where the speed is smaller, so it pushes the whole lot to one direction of rotation... I think it's logical, but maybe I've forgot some other factor...
As I understand the cone of air is created because the weight quantity of water, drops at the leaking hole, so the surrounding water leaks in (with certain speed), making the effect stronger until the pit of air above the hole reaches the hole itself because the leaking becomes faster. Is it like this or something else?