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I heard it on tv... i was just wondering if it's true

2007-04-05 13:11:13 · 12 answers · asked by pinkyfritz20 2 in Science & Mathematics Geography

12 answers

Depending on where you live, yes, this is actually true.

As another example, I lived in the northen part
of Brasil for a couple of years, at about 200 miles from
the equator (center of the earth), and there the water
doesn't go round and round, it just falls right through.

Australia is located in the south emisphere, so it
will go the opposite way as the north one.

Basically the nearer you are from the poles, the
better the flow :-) they just flow in opposite
directions.

Cheers.

2007-04-05 13:32:01 · answer #1 · answered by Fred 1 · 0 0

No. The Staight Dope also dispelled this myth several years ago. Read below for the complete explanation.

As a side note, I find it amusing that all the other responses have already assumed that the person asking the question actually lives in the Northern hemisphere.

The erroneous bit of folk wisdom you refer to says that water always drains in a clockwise direction in the Southern Hemisphere, and in a counterclockwise direction in the Northern Hemisphere. The supposed reason for this "fact" is the Coriolis effect, which has to do with the effect of the earth's rotation on moving objects.

Well, there is such a thing as the Coriolis effect. It explains why macroevents such as hurricanes rotate in a clockwise direction in the Southern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere. However, when you get down to itty-bitty phenomena such as the water draining out of your bathtub, the Coriolis effect is insignificant, amounting to roughly three ten-millionths of the force of gravity (in Boston, at least, which is where they happened to do the measuring).

The boring truth is that water drains every which way no matter what hemisphere you're in, for reasons which have to do mostly with the shape of the drain, the way you poured in the water in the first place, and so on.

All this was demonstrated way back in 1962 by one Ascher Shapiro, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Shapiro filled a circular tank six feet in diameter and six inches high in such a way that the water swirled in a clockwise direction. (Remember, now, that Coriolis forces in the Northern Hemisphere act in a counterclockwise direction.)

Shapiro then covered the tank with a plastic sheet, kept the temperature constant, and sat down to read comic books or whatever scientists do while they wait for their experiments to percolate. When he pulled the plug after an hour or two, the water went down the drain clockwise, presumably because it still retained some clockwise motion from filling.

On the other hand, if Shapiro pulled the plug after waiting a full 24 hours, the draining water spiraled counterclockwise, indicating that the motion from filling had subsided enough for the Coriolis effect to take over. When the plug was pulled after four to five hours, the water started draining clockwise, then gradually slowed down and finally started swirling in the opposite direction.

Needless to say, unless you are a consummate slob, you do not wait 24 hours (or even 4-5 hours) to drain your bathtub. Hence the influence of the Coriolis effect may be safely described as slight.

But I'm sure the myth of the bathtub spirals will endure. Shapiro did his work in 1962 and I proclaimed it to the world in 1983. Yet next to the mystery of where all the baby pigeons are, this remains the commonest question I get.

--CECIL ADAMS

2007-04-05 14:40:32 · answer #2 · answered by Thomas C 6 · 0 2

Yes, it's right. Not only in Australia, but everywhere in the south hemisphere. Water spins down a drain in different directions depending on which hemisphere you are in, due to the Coriolis effect. At the equator, the Coriolis force is non-existant. North of the equator (northern hemisphere) the deflection is to the right. South of the equator (southern hemisphere) the deflection is to the left.

2007-04-05 13:24:05 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Watery issues "spins" interior the different direction interior the southern hemisphere and northerly hemisphere. it truly is effect is very almost guarenteed in very great products (cyclone / typhoon / hurricane). even nevertheless in smaller bodies of water (bogs, sinks and bogs as an occasion) the effect is neglible / common (in case you probably did it a hundred circumstances,it truly is probable to be 50/50 yet might make bigger out to assert fifty 5 ought to do it, 40 5 won't). they are lots greater probable to be plagued by ability of the form of the physique, the place the water is offered in it truly is to do with the rotation of the earth. See linked for an evidence.

2016-11-26 21:33:17 · answer #4 · answered by ramjohn 4 · 0 0

I've just checked-- Here in Melbourne, the water went down in an anti clockwise direction. Now you try.

2007-04-05 22:09:02 · answer #5 · answered by jackeenjim 2 · 1 0

A classic Simpson's episode :)
It's the contours of a toilet that encourage flushing in a certain direction, either clockwise or counterclockwise (U.S.). I don't know why northern/southern hemisphere toilets are different. The coriolis effect is a common misconception, but it needs large bodies of water to take effect (think ocean, not toilet).

2007-04-05 13:22:23 · answer #6 · answered by slys3 2 · 0 2

Yes, it has to do with the Coriolis effect.

2007-04-05 13:13:59 · answer #7 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 1 0

Yep it's true.

2007-04-05 13:15:33 · answer #8 · answered by Naruto #1 4 · 0 0

Yes, it's true.

2007-04-05 13:13:36 · answer #9 · answered by Nox M 3 · 0 0

yes...everywhere below the equator.

2007-04-05 13:16:01 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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