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what happens if one is exactly on the equator? which direction would it go?

2007-12-17 09:20:02 · 9 answers · asked by Sniper of Goth 4 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

9 answers

If you design a perfect sink, then at the equator it just flows straight down and doesn't spiral at all.

Most sinks, however, are not perfect. A slight perturbation can easily cause a larger trend (a.k.a. the butterfly effect) and this case is no exception. So even on the equator, most sinks spiral one way or another. Nor is it hard to produce a sink that spirals in the 'wrong' way away from the equator.

It is possible to observe the coriolis effect in water flows... but again it's such a minor force that you need a particularly well-designed apparatus to do so.

2007-12-17 09:29:14 · answer #1 · answered by Doctor Why 7 · 1 0

Water is going down the drain whichever way it desires to in the two hemisphere. The direction is plagued by the form of the field and the currents interior the water. Coriolis, at one revolution in keeping with day, isn't effective adequate to conquer those factors. That being reported, Coriolis is proportional to the sine of the variety meaning this is maximum effective on the poles and nil on the equator. in case you had a super tank of water on the poles with the water nonetheless adequate and you bumped off the plug intently with a view to no longer disturb the water, this is possibly that the water might spiral in the process the hollow as a rule anticlockwise on the north pole and clockwise on the south pole. yet for wide-unfold situations, forget it! Water is going the two methods in the two hemispheres.

2016-11-03 21:30:00 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Since the earth spins on its axis the peripheral velocity decreases from the equator to the poles.The air mass with its low density and viscosity can be affected by this difference in velocity over long distances. This leads to swirls and eddies that end up as hurricanes and cyclones, which have a clockwise or anticlockwise movement. Such considerations do not apply to water draining, or a creeper twining around a pole.

I have a creeper in the northern hemisphere with different branches twining in opposite ways.

2007-12-18 04:11:30 · answer #3 · answered by A.V.R. 7 · 0 0

Logically, it would drain directly downward withouth any swirling at all!
However, as all the preceding gentlemen pointed out, there are lots of different factors involved in water swirling, perhaps the hemispheres being of less importance than others.

2007-12-17 09:29:44 · answer #4 · answered by L.J. Skeleton 3 · 1 0

Only wind currents are affected this way. That's why we have hurricanes down in the carribean. I don't know. Ask your physics teacher.

2007-12-17 09:29:33 · answer #5 · answered by Wisdom Seeker 3 · 0 0

Yup, water drains in different directions in different locations in the world.. yup..

I bet that it would go whichever way the water was directed..

2007-12-17 09:23:34 · answer #6 · answered by Jimmy T 1 · 0 1

It depends on the shape of the bowl, just like anywhere else.

2007-12-17 09:22:56 · answer #7 · answered by 006 6 · 0 1

that's a myth, it drains according to gravity and the way the drain is constructed.

2007-12-17 09:22:50 · answer #8 · answered by Prophet 1102 7 · 1 1

It would explode.

2007-12-17 09:22:08 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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