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![]() Doug wrote: skddlbyp wrote: I don't really understand the astro-physics of it. I'm not sure if the sun spins, or, if it does, it exerts a gravitational force in the direction of the spin. I may be wrong, but if the sun spins, wouldn't centrigugal force cause less gravitational force in the direction of the spin? I read that on earth you weigh slightly less at the equator than at the poles due to centrifugal force. Would this be true of the sun also? If you were on the Sun, and had a solid place to stand. If you weren't spinning with the Sun, you would feel the same gravity as without the spin. It is the tidal force that can transfer momentum from a spinning body to its satellite, causing it to move into a higher orbit. It's the Moon's pull on the oceans, and the oceans pull on the Moon that are causing the Earth to gradually slow in its rotation, and the Moon to move further away. The Sun rotates once in from 25 to 30 days, depending on at what latitude one the Sun you measure its rotation. But the tidal interaction between the Sun and Earth that could move it to a higher orbit is small. Double-A In another thread in this forum, a discussion of black holes, it was implied that black holes have stronger gravity at their poles than at their equators due to their very rapid spin. Doug |
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Sun does spin.
-- The Lone Sidewalk Astronomer of Rosamond Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Sidewalk Astronomy www.sidewalkastronomy.info The Church of Eternity http://home.inreach.com/starlord/church/Eternity.html "Doug" wrote in message ups.com... skddlbyp wrote: I don't really understand the astro-physics of it. I'm not sure if the sun spins, or, if it does, it exerts a gravitational force in the direction of the spin. I may be wrong, but if the sun spins, wouldn't centrigugal force cause less gravitational force in the direction of the spin? |
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In article ,
"skddlbyp" wrote: snip I don't really understand the astro-physics of it. I'm not sure if the sun spins, or, if it does, it exerts a gravitational force in the direction of the spin. May be confusing a gravitational field with an electro-magnetic field. Gravity is not affected by spin; it's simply proportional to a body's mass regardless of what that mass is doing. Now it is true that objects on the surface of a spinning body seem to experience centrifugal forces that work against gravity, strongest near the equator, but this is due to the object's motion as it rotates with the body. A free object that hovers over the surface without 'chasing' it will not experience any centrifugal force; from such a position there'd be no way to detect the rotation of the body without looking -- at least not from measuring its gravity. -- Odysseus |
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![]() "Odysseus" wrote in message news ![]() In article , "skddlbyp" wrote: snip I don't really understand the astro-physics of it. I'm not sure if the sun spins, or, if it does, it exerts a gravitational force in the direction of the spin. May be confusing a gravitational field with an electro-magnetic field. Gravity is not affected by spin; it's simply proportional to a body's mass regardless of what that mass is doing. Now it is true that objects on the surface of a spinning body seem to experience centrifugal forces that work against gravity, strongest near the equator, but this is due to the object's motion as it rotates with the body. A free object that hovers over the surface without 'chasing' it will not experience any centrifugal force; from such a position there'd be no way to detect the rotation of the body without looking -- at least not from measuring its gravity. Possibly not quite true. The effect is _tiny_, if it exists, but it is part of current theory, that spin does have an effect on gravity. Do a search on the 'Lense-Thirring effect'. There was an space probe planned to measure it, and while this has not happened, some scientists believe they have measured the effect from long term measurements made on some other probes. The 'jury is out' on this... Best Wishes |
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I found this very interesting article during a web search:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_dragging To my mind, It brings up the question again abot black holes and the concept of "space flowing" into them. While the Lense-Thirring effect is very small with objects that are not black holes and spin slowly, like planets, what would the effect be with objects like black holes that spin fast? Doug |
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I found this very interesting article during a web search:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_dragging To my mind, It brings up the question again abot black holes and the concept of "space flowing" into them. While the Lense-Thirring effect is very small with objects that are not black holes and spin slowly, like planets, what would the effect be with objects like black holes that spin fast? Doug |
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![]() Roger Hamlett wrote: Possibly not quite true. The effect is _tiny_, if it exists, but it is part of current theory, that spin does have an effect on gravity. Do a search on the 'Lense-Thirring effect'. There was an space probe planned to measure it, and while this has not happened, GRAVITY PROBE B http://einstein.stanford.edu/ Gravity Probe B http://www.gravityprobeb.com/index.html some scientists believe they have measured the effect from long term measurements made on some other probes. The 'jury is out' on this... Best Wishes |
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The Ancient Order of Moridura - scientific adventure novel with a
gravitational theme ISBN 1844264068 Released Friday 10th November 2006 512 pages Now available online from Amazon.co.uk, WH Smith, Tesco, etc. "Odysseus" wrote in message news ![]() In article , "skddlbyp" wrote: |
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![]() "Doug" wrote in message oups.com... During a web search I found this page on the spin of black holes: http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...ay_031124.html Doug Thanks! Nice article. H.J. |
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During a web search I found this page on the spin of black holes:
http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...ay_031124.html Doug |
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