The Flat Earth Wiki
The Flat Earth Wiki
Log in

Difference between revisions of "The Coriolis Effect"

From The Flat Earth Wiki
(Redirected page to Coriolis Effect)
Tag: New redirect
 
(39 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
A rotating Round Earth model predicts that bodies which move through the air will be appear to be deflected Eastwards or Westwards in their path of movement due to the rotation of the earth. This effect has been termed the "Coriolis Effect."
+
#REDIRECT [[Coriolis Effect]]
 
 
The Coriolis Effect, however, appears to be a fictitious effect that is not, and has never been, properly demonstrated with experimental evidence. Its proponents are unable to show that this effect has ever been detected or that it is truly  necessary to account for in various operations. The evidence for this effect appears to be based entirely on 'common knowledge', on how things 'should be', and by authors who make 'predictions'; but all articles and documents presented in favor of the "Coriolis Effect" are without reference to, or demonstration of, the critical and necessary experimental evidence to directly prove the matter.
 
 
 
=Origin of the Coriolis Effect=
 
 
 
In an article titled [http://www.legi.grenoble-inp.fr/web/spip.php?article819&lang=en History of the Coriolis Force] ([http://archive.fo/R364W Archive]) the origin story of the "Coriolis Effect" is described:
 
 
 
{{cite|The first detailed study on a manifestation of the "Coriolis" force was made by Giovanni Borelli in the 1660s, when he considered the problem of falling bodies on a rotating Earth. In '''a theoretical analysis''', he found that they will undergo a small eastward deflection during their fall.}}
 
 
 
=Artillery=
 
 
 
It has been alleged that the Coriolis Effect plays a part in the ballistic trajectory of artillery, and that artillerymen must account for it for accuracy. We are presented with military range tables for accounting for the Coriolis Effect, and so, it is speculated, the Coriolis Effect ''must'' be a real effect.
 
 
 
==U.S. Army Artillery Coriolis Table Example==
 
 
 
We are directed to Table H from following document:
 
 
 
'''The Production of Firing Tables for Cannon Artillery (1967)'''<br>
 
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/826735.pdf ([https://web.archive.org/save/http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/826735.pdf Archive])
 
 
 
Pg 103, Table H, ''Corrections to Range, in Meters, to Compensate for the Rotation of Earth'':
 
 
 
[[File:Army-coriolis-table.png|500px]]
 
 
 
When the Coriolis Effect proponents are challenged on the accuracy or validity of this table, its proponents proclaim that if the table were incorrect then artillery and artillerymen would be routinely inaccurate and miss their targets, and how could that be the case?
 
 
 
==Artillery Ballistics Not Accurate==
 
 
 
From the the introduction of the above paper provided to us we read that military artillery, which is purported to require adjustments for the "Coriolis Effect," is indeed, routinely inaccurate. The first round generally misses its target. Only after missing a number of times, and then adjusting the alignment of the cannon to compensate, does the artilleryman hit his or her target.
 
 
 
From the above [http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/826735.pdf 1967 artillery paper]  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20181108210027/http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/826735.pdf Archive]) we read:
 
 
 
{{cite|Ideally, a firing table enables the artilleryman to solve his fire problem and to hit the target with the first round fired. ''In the present state of the art, this goal is seldom achieved, except coincidentally.'' The use of one or more forward observers, in conjunction with the use of a firing table, enables the artilleryman to adjust his fire and hit the target with the third or fourth round fired.}}
 
 
 
In another artillery paper from 1973, we read a similar quote:
 
 
 
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/909704.pdf ([https://web.archive.org/web/20181108210115/http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/909704.pdf Archive])
 
 
 
{{cite|When today's field artillery firing tables are used with today's approved delivery techniques [as described in VM 6-401], accurate fire can be brought to bear on targets.
 
 
 
Such a statement can only be made because today's approved delivery techniques recognize that many errors (both precision and bias errors) exist and those techniques arc designed to minimize these errors. ''The techniques are not designed to produce first round hits, nor does the statement above infer that such hits can be achieved.''}}
 
 
 
In 2016 a claimed expert named Guy Schuchman says that, despite GPS and modern improvements, [https://www.quora.com/How-does-artillery-crew-calculate-target the same problems exist today] ([http://archive.fo/eKSnD Archive]):
 
 
 
{{cite|''It's extremely rare for the first round to hit the target.'' It's just too much data which not all of it can be measured in 100% accuracy and human errors are quite common: small offsets in calculating the coordinates of the target or the gun, small errors in calibration, humidity of the explosive propellant, etc.. The first round is just a test round. When it falls near the target it's the artillery observer's job to see how far and in what offset did it hit away from the target and provide the FDC with the data.}}
 
 
 
A 2017 paper by Australia's Armament Research Service admits the same:
 
 
 
https://www.icrc.org/en/download/file/36109/ares-icrc-report-indirect-fire.pdf ([https://web.archive.org/web/20170215173214/https://www.icrc.org/en/download/file/36109/ares-icrc-report-indirect-fire.pdf Archive])
 
 
 
{{cite|Even though great effort is made to calculate the effect of environmental and ballistic variables, an unguided artillery projectile will not reliably strike the exact point at which it is aimed. Although artillerymen strive for first round accuracy, this will still be measured in tens of meters, and in deliberate targeting or combat engagements this introduces a degree of uncertainty when assessing the safety of friendly forces and non-combatants. Properly employed, artillery gun and mortar projectiles and rockets land in a predictable area (accuracy) in a non-predictable fashion (precision), and in common with small arms fire (especially machine guns), the employment of artillery systems yields a ‘beaten zone’ or field of fire into which rounds will fall. This zone is generally cigar-shaped with the long axis falling along the line from the gun to the target, as deviation tends to occur in range rather than azimuth. The length and breadth of the zone is range dependent, as with greater range, external factors have more time to exert influence on the projectile flight.}}
 
 
 
=Sharp Shooting=
 
 
 
It has been alleged that the Coriolis Effect also plays a part in accurate sharp shooting over long distances. However, we find several online references where claimed sniper veterans have stated that they have never taken the Coriolis Effect into account when shooting. We point to the U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Army, and U.S. Navy SEAL sniping manuals, which do not mention the Coriolis Effect anywhere in their sniping texts at all.
 
 
 
==Sniping Manuals==
 
 
 
'''U.S. Marine Corps Sniping Manuals'''<br>
 
[https://archive.org/details/milmanual-fmfm-1-3b-sniping-u.s.-marine-corps/page/n0 1981 FMFM 1-3B Sniping] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20181108192149/https://ia801406.us.archive.org/13/items/milmanual-fmfm-1-3b-sniping-u.s.-marine-corps/fmfm_1-3b_sniping_u.s._marine_corps.pdf Archive])<br>
 
[https://www.marines.mil/Portals/59/Publications/MCTP%203-01E%20(Formerly%20MCWP%203-15.3).pdf?ver=2016-08-02-130206-573 2016 MCTP 3-01E Sniping]
 
 
 
'''U.S. Army Sniper Field Training Manuals'''<br>
 
[http://pdf.textfiles.com/manuals/MILITARY/united_states_army_fm_23-10%20-%2017_august_1994.pdf 1994 FM 23-10 Sniper Training]<br>
 
[https://archive.org/details/milmanual-tc-23-14-sniper-training--employment 1989 TC 23-14 Sniper Training and Employment]<br>
 
[http://www.bits.de/NRANEU/others/amd-us-archive/FM3-05.222%2803%29.pdf 2003 FM 3-05.222 Special Forces Sniper Training and Employment] ([https://archive.org/details/milmanual-fm-3-05.222-special-forces-sniper-training--employment Archive])
 
 
 
'''U.S. Navy SEAL Sniping Manual'''<br>
 
[https://archive.org/details/milmanual-basic-sniper-training-u.s-navy-seals US Navy SEAL Basic Sniper Training]<br>
 
[https://archive.org/details/milmanual-us-navy-seal-sniper-training-program US Navy SEAL Sniper Training Program]
 
 
 
The sniper must know the general principles of: perspective, vanishing point, perspective drawing, delineation, and geographical areas of intelligence operations. However, the words "Coriolis" or "Coriolis Effect," do not appear anywhere in the U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Army, or U.S. Navy SEAL sniper manuals.
 
 
 
[[File:Coriolis_Not_Found.png|450px]]
 
 
 
The reader might ponder why the U.S. Military does not teach this allegedly important effect to its snipers.
 
 
 
==Misleading References==
 
 
 
The internet is rife with references that the accounting of the Coriolis Effect is actively used, but this is an assumption without demonstration.
 
 
 
'''The World’s Longest Sniper Kill: The Enemy Shot Dead at 3,871 Yards (Over 2 Miles Away)'''<br>
 
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/the-worlds-longest-sniper-kill-the-enemy-shot-dead-3871-24141 ([http://archive.fo/eeXUL Archive])
 
 
 
{{cite|To understand the complexity of the shot, it’s best to start with a sniper maxim: sniping is weaponized math. Although a .50 caliber sniper rifle bullet can fly as far as five miles, a host of factors including gravity, wind speed and direction, altitude, barometric pressure, humidity and ''even the Coriolis Effect'' act upon the bullet as it travels. Even worse, these effects increase the farther the bullet travels. A successful sniper team operating at extreme distances must do its best to predict exactly how these factors will affect the bullet and calculate how to get the bullet back onto target.}}
 
 
 
This quote actually says "these are the factors that will affect the bullet," rather than "these are the factors that the sniper accounted for." One is a commentary by the author and the other is a depiction of process. The reader should be able to see and understand that there is a difference.
 
 
 
=Deflection of Falling Bodies=
 
 
 
From the 17th century well into the 19th century the deflection of falling objects was a hotly debated subject, and numerous experiments were conducted to study the landing path of bodies when dropped from high distances. To protect from the wind and elements the experiments were conducted within towers, high churches, and down underground mines and shafts.
 
 
 
From the [http://www.legi.grenoble-inp.fr/web/spip.php?article819&lang=en History of the Coriolis Force] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20181108191837/http://www.legi.grenoble-inp.fr/web/spip.php?article819&lang=en Archive]) piece there is only one experiment which author of the article references in favor of the Coriolis Effect. All other papers referenced in the article appear to be theoretical analysis'.
 
 
 
{{cite|Only at the beginning of the 19th century were experiments done in a sufficiently careful manner to detect the deflection. For example,
 
 
 
J.F. Benzenberg (1804): Versuche über das Gesetz des Falls, über den Widerstand der Luft und über die Umdrehung der Erde nebst der Geschichte aller früheren Versuche von Galiläi bis auf Guglielmini, Mallinckbodt, Dortmund.}}
 
 
 
This is one of the Deflection of Falling Body Experiments. From [https://books.google.com/books?id=seNJAAAAcAAJ&dq=%22In%20the%20beginning%20of%20this%20century%2C%20Dr.%20Benzenberg%20undertook%22&pg=PR5#v=onepage&q=%22In%20the%20beginning%20of%20this%20century,%20Dr.%20Benzenberg%20undertook%22&f=false 'The Report of the Sixteenth Meeting of the British Association of the Advancement of Science'] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20181108191819/https://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5QafWOEDvr7FEy9BRmxa5N9Chygx5ngDsvc_HBulHZTJwEUQnF3Xy30Hdkwf86QDuknPjcw7TtzwCepteA-XIkdFlY3tvHmrJSUodE4wbax8vC4UpAiZqdWz9UmHMgRGnFNX9Ky5yJWKz_KhMbpW-tXNQTyHOv2TCa-1Ry1NgXadPOOuKLbg_SWMgQKhm4cnMkp0QGADXHpQ0mw-SQBiGRs_CsFLrFKGtf6v7thrl5ni_GNWAngRZnoMVvfRGPAyDrB06FYYE Archive]) we find an analysis of Dr. Benzenberg's experiments:
 
 
 
{{cite|In the beginning of this century, Dr. Benzenberg undertook new experiments at Hamburgh, from a height of about 240 feet, which gave a deviation of 3·99 French lines; but they gave a still greater deviation to the south. Though the experiments here quoted seem to be satisfactory in point of the eastern deviation, I cannot consider them to be so in truth; for it is but right to state that ''these experiments have considerable discrepancies among themselves'', and that their mean, therefore, cannot be of great value. In some other experiments made afterwards in a deep pit, Dr. Benzenberg obtained only the eastern deviation, but they ''seem not to deserve more confidence''. Greater faith is to be placed in the experiments of Professor Reich, in a pit of 540 feet, at Freiberg. Here the easterly deviation was also found in good agreement with the calculated result; but a considerable ''southern deviation'' was observed. The numbers obtained were the means of experiments which ''differed much among themselves.'' After all this, there can be no doubt that our knowledge on this subject is imperfect, and that new experiments are to be desired.}}
 
 
 
==Earth Not a Globe Chapter==
 
 
 
In the book Earth Not a Globe, the author Samuel Birley Rowbotham devotes an entire chapter to the Deflection of Falling Bodies experiment saga.<br><br>
 
 
 
<center>'''Earth Not a Globe: Deflection of Falling Bodies'''<br>
 
by Samuel Birley Rowbotham<br>
 
http://www.sacred-texts.com/earth/za/za54.htm ([http://archive.fo/nkbWE Archive])</center>
 
 
 
In this chapter Rowbotham walks us through numerous experiments, the inconsistencies among them, and concludes his chapter with:
 
 
 
{{cite|Thus it is admitted that deflection from a height of 300 feet ''"is so small as to be practically inappreciable;"'' that ''"great heights are necessary for giving only a deviation of one-tenth part of an inch;"'' that when this amount was observed, ''"at the same time deviation to the south was given, which was not in accordance with the mathematical calculations;"'' that ''"the experiments have considerable discrepancies among themselves;"'' that ''"the experiments differed very much;"'' that ''"after all there can be no doubt that our knowledge on this subject is imperfect;"'' that '''''on repeating the experiments with the utmost possible care down a shaft of 1320 feet in depth, the bullets did not fall easterly at all from the plummets,''''' ''"but from 10 to 20 inches south of the plumb-line,"'' and out of forty-eight bullets, forty-four fell ''"on the south side of the shaft, in situations which precluded exact measurements of the distances being taken;"'' and, finally, that puzzled mathematicians, with their ever ready ingenuity to make facts agree with the wildest of theories, even with those of a opposite character, conclude that ''"falling bodies may have either north, south, east, or west deflection from the plumb-line."'' What value can such uncertain and conflicting evidence possess in the minds of reasoning men? They are shameless logicians, indeed, who contend that, from such results, the earth is proved to have a diurnal rotation!}}
 
 
 
==Schlebusch Drop Plot==
 
 
 
On p.271 of [https://rmets.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1256/wea.141.02 Weather Vol. 58], we find an example of the results of such drop experiments:
 
 
 
{{cite|In 1803 an experiment, dropping iron pebbles in a 90m deep mine shaft, was conducted in Schlebusch, Germany. The event attracted the interest of the scientific community, and the 24-year old German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss and the 53-year old French mathematician Pierre Simon de Laplace volunteered to calculate the theoretically expected deflection Fig.5}}
 
 
 
[[File:Schlebusch Experiment Plot.png|400px]]
 
 
 
One quickly sees that the results are not consistent and any argument in favor of the Coriolis Effect would need to be made on basis of statistics.
 
 
 
If the "Coriolis Effect" shifted the pebbles to the East by about 12 units, then how would this explain the Eastwards concentration of pebbles between 20 and 30 units? If we take away the Eastwards deflection of the "Coriolis Effect" we find that those pebbles are still biased to the East. One would have to explain why they are biased to know whether the Coriolis Effect had anything to do with it or not. As Rowbotham relates, other experiments do not show this Eastwards bias.
 
 
 
=Water Currents=
 
 
 
==Laboratory Water Vortex Experiments==
 
 
 
In the 1960s a researcher named Ascher Shapiro claimed that water vortex direction was due to the "Coriolis Effect". The experiments started with bathtubs and then with six feet wide tanks of water:
 
 
 
http://classic.scopeweb.mit.edu/articles/shapiros-bathtub-experiment/ ([https://web.archive.org/web/20190216003525/http://classic.scopeweb.mit.edu/articles/shapiros-bathtub-experiment/ Archive])
 
 
 
{{cite|Shapiro’s Bathtub Experiment<br>
 
by Conor Myhrvold<br>
 
posted November 1, 2011 at 12:53 pm<br>
 
 
 
Over forty years ago, in the 1960s, the world briefly became captivated with how a bathtub drains. Did something called the Coriolis effect influence the twirling water?
 
 
 
The Earth’s rotation influences how fluids swirl on the planet’s surface. It’s why low-pressure systems in the northern hemisphere twist counterclockwise. This phenomenon, known as the Coriolis effect, is the appearance of an object to deflect to one side in a rotating reference frame. Since it is such a tiny effect on small scales, no one had yet proven that this inertial force actually affects how water leaves a bathtub, despite many previous efforts.
 
 
 
In 1962, the same year that Watson and Crick received their Nobel Prize for the discovery of the double helix, MIT professor Ascher Shapiro, an expert in fluid mechanics, set up an elaborate test to try to change that. Shapiro’s elementary experiment, which started with a bathtub, quickly turned into a complicated and ambitious undertaking that involved a tank six feet wide and six inches deep.
 
 
 
'''The Coriolis effect at MIT’s latitude, 42°, was just “thirty-millionths that of gravity, which is so small that it will be overcome by filling and even temperature differences and water impurities,” reported one of many newspapers and periodicals that covered the results of Shapiro’s experiment.''' After much tinkering to cancel out these interferences, and presumably a hefty water bill, Shapiro found the answer: the Coriolis effect does indeed cause a bathtub vortex in the northern hemisphere to swirl counterclockwise.
 
 
 
'''But even after his results were published in a letter to Nature, Shapiro’s confirmation drew the skepticism of readers. In correspondence with one reader, Shapiro noted: “Many results contradictory to this have been reported in the literature but all of them have involved faulty experiments due to a lack of realization of how sensitive the experiment is.”''' He was supported, however, by colleagues in the Northern hemisphere who confirmed the counterclockwise bathtub drainage, while those in the Southern hemisphere demonstrated the same effect in the opposite direction—a clockwise flow—just as anticipated.
 
 
 
In a world without electronic communication, where author correspondence was a more prolonged affair, a sort of chivalry existed between a scientist and a popular audience who took an interest in academics. Scrawled with a pencil on back-and-forth correspondences between Shapiro and his fans and housed today within a dusty and faded folder in the MIT archives are the records of reprints being sent, of questions being answered, and of careful and nuanced responses that understated Shapiro’s high standing at MIT. A Ford Professor at the time, and later elevated to Institute professor, Shapiro took time to send article reprints for those who asked for it and to answer mail from inquisitive readers, some of whom promoted dubious questions and claims.
 
 
 
...Who would have thought the swirl of a bathtub would have been a matter of great interest? '''For a seemingly insignificant problem, the bathtub controversy loomed large in Shapiro’s career until his death in 2004.''' The first line of his obituary in the Boston Globe read: “Dr. Ascher Shapiro wanted to get a handle on how fluids move whether they were swirling down the bathtub drain, or flowing through the human body.”}}
 
 
 
Controversy because other researchers were getting different and inconsistent results. Shapiro claimed that he could perform the experiment and that all other researchers were wrong.
 
 
 
The below shows that even with extreme care the direction of the vortex can be influenced by very small perturbations such as how the lid is lifted.
 
 
 
http://web.aeromech.usyd.edu.au/history-chapters/C3%20ThermoFluids.pdf ([https://web.archive.org/web/20180417201351/http://web.aeromech.usyd.edu.au/history-chapters/C3%20ThermoFluids.pdf Archive])
 
 
 
{{cite|At Tom Fink’s invitation, Professor Lloyd M. Trefethen of Tufts University, USA, spent a short sabbatical in Mechanical Engineering in 1964/65. Already famous for his work on surface tension phenomena, he led us into a repeat of the experiments on the bathtub vortex that had recently been conducted by Ascher Shapiro at MIT. After much careful design, a circular tank of some 2.4m in diameter and 0.4m depth was constructed and installed in one of the subterranean dungeons of the old Peter Nicol Russell building. Carefully designed procedures and their diligent execution resulted in absolutely conclusive results that were published in Nature (Trefethen, et al, 1965). A re-enactment for the local media was a disaster: '''Bilger and Tanner muffed the removal of the covering baffles creating a great vortex in the water that then went out the wrong way. ‘Scientists baffled’ cried the media. We even made Time magazine!'''}}
 
 
 
In [https://www.slideshare.net/augustodefranco/flow-natures-patterns Flow, Nature's Patterns, a Tapestry in Three Parts] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20140205015201/http://www.slideshare.net/augustodefranco/flow-natures-patterns Archive]) by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Ball Dr. Phillip Ball] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20180705182943/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Ball Archive]) the author gives an overview on p. 47:
 
 
 
{{cite|A popular notion says that the rotation of the earth starts the bathtub vortex spinning. But while it is certainly true that this rotation controls the direction of the giant atmospheric vortices of cyclones, which rotate counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern, the influence of the Earth’s rotation on a micro-cyclone in the bath should be extremely weak. Biesel claimed that it cannot be responsible for the bathtub vortex because, contrary to popular belief, they may rotate in either direction at any place on the planet. But is that really so? In 1962 the American engineer Ascher Shapiro at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology claimed that he had consistently produced counter-clockwise vortices in his lab by first allowing the water to settle for 24 hours, dissipating any residual rotational motion, before pulling the plug. The claim sparked controversy: later researchers said that the experiment was extremely sensitive to the precise conditions in which it was conducted. '''The dispute has never quite been resolved.''' We do know, however, why a small initial rotation of the liquid develops into a robust vortex. This is due to the movement of the water as it converges on the outlet. In theory this convergence can be completely symmetrical: water moves inwards to the plughole from all directions. But the slightest departure from that symmetrical situation, which could happen at random, may be amplified because of the way fluidflow operates.}}
 
 
 
[https://journals.jps.jp/doi/10.1143/JPSJ.81.074401 An abstract] at the Physical Society of Japan states:
 
 
 
{{cite|It has long been controversial whether the Coriolis force due to the rotation of the earth plays a significant role in the generation of the bathtub vortex in small vessels such as bathtubs.}}
 
 
 
==Large Scale Water Currents==
 
 
 
We find the assertion that large scale water currents rotate in accordance with the "Coriolis Effect" to be untrue. See [[Coriolis Effect (Weather)]]
 
 
 
=Wind Currents=
 
 
 
We find the assertion that the wind currents generally rotate in accordance with the "Coriolis Effect" to be untrue. See [[Coriolis Effect (Weather)]]
 
 
 
=Addendum=
 
 
 
Many of these discussions against the Round Earth Theory are often and trivially won with a simple request of evidence. 'Mountains' of evidence are claimed to exist for phenomena such as this, yet when the Round Earth proponent is questioned in a simple and polite manner on the necessary demonstration, we find that the response is generally, to any reasonable standard, woefully insufficient. It is quite curious that this effect cannot be clearly demonstrated, and is so easily defeated with such simple questioning, despite our opponent's access to the vast collection of human knowledge that is the internet.
 
 
 
==See Also==
 
 
 
* [[Coriolis Effect (Weather)]]
 
* [[Foucault Pendulum]]
 
* [[Michelson-Morley Experiment]]
 
 
 
[[Category:Form and Magnitude]]
 

Latest revision as of 22:59, 28 February 2019

Redirect to: