Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
water in plug
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by matt_r_baker. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I once asked a New Zealand airways jumbo pilot this very question.He spent years flying from the southern to the northern hemispheres and of course t'other way.He was quite adamant that it was a complete fallacy and explained that the water could be influenced to go either way in either hemisphere by giving it an almost imperceptable "nudge" of encouragement to start it off.Most people try this by filling a bowl or basin with water and then pulling the plug. They invariably use the cold tap to fill the bowl which sets up a current within the water which lasts for some time. If the tap is on the right then the water tends to travel in a clockwise direction around the bowl and so gives the impression that the water always goes the same way.Try it, you'll see. don't forget Mr. Palin is a very nice gentleman but is also an actor of some merit and an ex-Python!
There IS an influence, called the Coriolis Effect - as mentioned above - which affects LARGE systems, such as weather and sea-currents moving over the earth's surface.
However, it has no real influence on something as relatively tiny as a basinful/bathful of water. In fact, the eddies and currents created by filling the bath are vastly more powerful and would take days to settle down to complete stillness. Consequently, the water will generally flow OUT in the same direction as that in which it flowed IN. If your hot tap is on the right and your bath has mostly hot water in it, inflowing water will largely circle clockwise and vice versa if the tap-positions are reversed. Consequently, that will almost certainly be the direction in which the water will flow OUT, too. So, there - re small containers - is the "No" answer
Engineers at the Massachussetts Institute of Technology - clearly in the northern hemisphere - built a large, wide tank in the 1950s with a small plug-hole at its centre. They filled it and left it to settle for several days, then opened the valve. In each of the many repetitions of the experiment, the water DID start to swirl in an anticlockwise direction. When they deliberately set up a clockwise swirl, it invariably died down and returned to anticlockwise.
The explanation, apparently is that - if the water has settled completely - it is rotating, along with everything else on earth. The fluid particles nearest to the equator are obviously moving more quickly than those furthest from it and, when they are released through the plug-hole, they develop their characteristic direction-finding properties.