| | #11 (permalink) | |||
| Creating Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: U.S. Midwest
Posts: 2,043
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? Quote:
Angular momentum is here tangential velocity times radius from center of rotation: L(angular momentum) = V(velocity) X R(radius from center)Since angular momentum stays constant V and R are inversely proportional. As V gets bigger, R must get smaller and vice versa. This means water further from the hole is expected to have less velocity than closer water. This is consistent with water forming a whirlpool and the link above does a bit to explain that. Quote:
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~modest
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| Understanding Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 374
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? G'day CraigD I agree with what you say. You expalin it to the T. Quote:
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| Thinking | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? Parkes radio telescope in Australia has discovered a pulsar wobbling on its axis, helping confirm Einsteins theory of gravity. Is it known what happens to a body in precession, in space? Does it react differently to a spinning top on Earth, which careers all over the place when spin is lost and if so why? __________________ |
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| | #15 (permalink) | ||||
| Creating Join Date: May 2005 Location: Silver Spring, MD, USA
Posts: 4,509
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
Astronomical bodies and systems of bodies - planets, stars, stellar systems, galaxies, etc. - are predicted to spin by any theory that assumes classical and/or relativistic mechanics to be at least roughly accurate on astronomical scales. Every cosmological theory I've ever heard of - Big Bang theories, with and without inflation, steady state theories, etc. - assume this, so all predict that the universe should be moving about like it's observed to. There are some subtle differences between different theories of mechanics precise predictions of various motions - for example, between a purely Newtonian and General Relativities predictions of the precession of the orbit of Mercury - but nothing as dramatic as a prediction that rotation and revolution, or their absence, should be much more or less common than observed. One occasionally hears or reads very vague, speculative ideas along the lines of Mach's principle (which isn't really a scientific principle, but more of a philosophical guideline for speculation) in which the absence of large-scale spinning might have profound consequences - for example, the idea that if systems were not rotating relative to the universe as a whole, they'd not have their usual momentums - but to the best of my knowledge, no well developed theory makes such predictions, and as there's no practical way to experimentally test such predictions (how can you make the whole universe stop moving?), so the subject is mostly one of philosophical recreation, not rigorous science. Quote:
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Though we know that at some point, General Relativity will need to be radically revamped, because it doesn't include important known phenomena on very small scales, observations like these recent ones show that it continues to do very well on astronomical scales. Quote:
The “careening all over the place” Paige describes is, I think, less a description of a mechanical prediction, than of what's commonly called chaos. Very small differences in initial conditions - ie: the position and speed of the top when it's launched - result in large discrepencies in in its predicted behavior later on. Therefore, no matter how precisely we measure a toy top's initial state, it's practically impossible to predict its precise position and velocity later on. Many systems, not just rotating ones, exhibit chaotic behavior. I’ve noticed a tendency for people to regard the spinning of heavenly bodies as unexpected and significant, rather than overwhelmingly likely and signifying only that likely outcomes are observed more often than unlikely ones. I think this is because, as with many physical phenomena, our intuitions are tuned to everyday phenomena on the surface of Earth. In our everyday experience, things set to spinning – a wheel on an axle, a stone on a patch of ice, etc. – quickly stop due to friction. In the high momentum, low friction domain of outer space, however, this intuition serves us false. Although there are many examples of actual friction and friction-like phenomena in space (such as the tidal locking of the Moon to always point the same hemisphere at Earth), the norm, in space, is for objects set to spinning to continue spinning for a long time.
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| | #16 (permalink) | |
| Thinking | Re: Why do we tend to find the spinning of heavenly bodies remarkable? Quote:
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