Zain Haidar
Published: March 30,2015
Uh oh, physics teachers. It might be time to rewrite your textbooks.
It's
been taught for decades that it would take 42 minutes to fall through
the Earth, assuming you had the resources to build a tunnel long enough
and avoid incineration at the core.
Alexander Klotz, a graduate
student at McGill University in Canada, has found that widely accepted
number is off by nearly 4 minutes.
(MORE: Earth's Inner Core has its Own Inner Core)
Klotz's
calculation, published in the March issue of the American Journal of
Physics (AJP), doesn't have massive implications for science, but it
says something about the nature of common knowledge.
"This is the kind of paper we love," AJP editor David Jackson told Science Magazine.
The
problem is brought up in intro physics classes because it helps
students understand Newton's law of gravity, and as Science Magazine
points out, it features a "common but very important type of cyclical
motion."
On top of those valid reasons, we've all wondered about
digging a tunnel through the Earth and jumping through to the other
side.
Here's how Klotz cut the time down:
Normally the
Earth-Tunnel-Fall assumes that the Earth has a uniform density
throughout for the sake of simplicity. Because the Earth is composed of
several different layers, however, density increases as you approach the
core and lessens on the return trip, which affects how gravity acts on
moving bodies.
Using the Preliminary Reference Earth Model, Klotz
figured out how mass is distributed throughout the interior of the
Earth, and with that number, arrived at a time of 38 minutes and 11
seconds for a complete subterranean trip.
So, if you're planning on a voyage through the Earth, prepare for some serious heat and a shorter journey.
MORE: Earth at Night
No comments:
Post a Comment