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What is the proof, without leaving the Earth, and involving only basic physics, that the earth rotates around its axis?

By basic physics I mean the physics that the early physicists must've used to deduce that it rotates, not relativity.

Qmechanic
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user8721
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    Dunno whether dawn & dusk count? (because, we know that sun rotates) which restricts our periodic count for a 24 hours and not 6 months or an year..? I can't imagine how good that be or how well our power station (currently with frequent shutdowns) will actually hold for a week!!! – Waffle's Crazy Peanut May 28 '13 at 15:45
  • Related: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/13324/2451 – Qmechanic May 28 '13 at 16:01
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    The apparent retrograde motion of the planets as observed from earth was puzzling. In order to resolve the motions into logical patterns, it was necessary to consider the earth both moving in orbit and about its axis. –  May 28 '13 at 16:02
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    True proofs exist only in Math, in the real world, you can not be 100% sure about anything :) – Ivan Kuckir May 28 '13 at 19:12
  • There is an effect on earth by it's own rotation I have heard of. The circumference of the earth along it's Equator is larger than any circumference measured crossing north and south poles. – retromuz May 28 '13 at 23:30
  • Night and day, assuming that it is already realized that we orbit the sun. – Henry F May 29 '13 at 01:56
  • Not a proof but a good evidence is difference in gravitational acceleration on different latitudes. – grep May 29 '13 at 02:33
  • @Ϛѓăʑɏ βµԂԃϔ dawn and dunn should certainly count (and star movement) as if night and day were related to rotation of sun (if we imagine a sun with a dark side and a light side) we would see it like a changing disk staying in the same place, not the sun going beyond the horizon. – kriss May 29 '13 at 08:50

8 Answers8

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The Foucault pendulum is a great experiment which does demonstrate that the Earth is rotating, but it was only introduced in 1851. The Earth had been known to rotate for several centuries before that, probably stimulated by Copernicus and Galileo pushing the heliocentric model of the solar system during the 16th century.

A couple of decades before Faucalt's pendulum, the Coriolis effect was discovered. This effects (among other similarly large systems) hurricanes, causing them to rotate clockwise/anti clockwise depending on whether they're in the southern/northern hemisphere. It is an apparent force that appears in any rotating frame of reference (like a spinning planet). This again won't have helped early 'spinning-Earth' believers.

Early evidence that the Earth rotates was almost certainly the observation of the sun, planets and stars moving across the sky and then, with the help of telescopes, of the other planets also rotating. Of course this requires you to trust that the Earth is not the centre of the universe and so doesn't "prove" the Earth is spinning in the same way as observation of Foucault's pendulum or the Coriolis effect.

The idea of a "proof" in physics is a difficult one. A theory such as the 'spinning-Earth' will at first simply be presented to explain anomalous observations that current theories can't (such as why do the other planets and the sun move independently of the background stars if everything rotates together around the Earth?). It then gets tested by experiments inspired or predicted by the theory (if the Earth is spinning, what should we expect to observe?). If everything holds up, it's accepted as fact. Eventually, some bright spark realises he/she can demonstrate that the Earth is rotating with a clever little experiment (Foucault's pendulum/Coriolis effect/launching a rocket into space) and it is added to the mountain of evidence already accumulated on the subject.

ejrb
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    Please, could whoever downvoted this add a comment to explain? In the last couple of days I noticed several downvotes without any comment. This is not constructive. – Lagerbaer May 28 '13 at 16:25
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    I don't have enough reputation to downvote you, but I would if I could. Neither Copernicus nor Galileo KNEW that the Earth rotates above the Sun. See answer below. – Placidia May 28 '13 at 18:42
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    My point was that Copernicus and Galileo presented a theory about our solar system that put the sun at the centre not the Earth. Whether or not they personally believed the Earth rotates is not important, but it's hard to see how they could explain basic phenomenon like the day/night cycle if they didn't. My point was that in the centuries that followed, scientists came to except that the Earth rotates allowing Foucault and others to think up clever experimental demonstrations of this fact. – ejrb May 28 '13 at 19:56
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    I believe the history is that the Coriolis effect was proposed, and then used as an argument against the rotation of the earth: http://arxiv.org/abs/1012.3642 I don't think the Coriolis effect due to the rotation of the earth was observed until the Foucault pendulum. –  May 28 '13 at 23:26
  • This is a very good answer. And people asking "Does the sun turn around the earth or the earth around the sun ?" should read it to understand their question is stupid. A better question would be : "Does the sun turn around the earth or the earth rotate on itself ?" (heliocentric model). The other one is a purely a matter of relative referential and mathematically there is not much difference. Henceforth in a way Coriolis effect or Foucault Pendulum are "proofs" of heliocentric model. – kriss May 29 '13 at 08:59
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    @kriss: Partly incorrect. Coriolis/Foucault are proofs that the Earth spins (+ Coriolis allows you to find the principal axis), not that the Earth revolves around anything. – Sébastien Renauld May 29 '13 at 15:55
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    @Sébastien Renauld: I agree with you. But may be you didn't read the first part of the comment ? I'm just stating that the historical alternative was choosing between sun revolving around the earth (geocentric model) or earth spining. And Coriolis and Foucault are independant proofs that earth is spinning (henceforth geocentric model is broken). Earth revolving around the sun is an unrelated physical problem (and really we should more accurately say both and other planets are revolving around the gravity center of the system... wich is inside the sun). – kriss May 29 '13 at 22:08
  • @kriss: How does "the earth revolves around its axis" implies "the earth must be turning around something"? – Sébastien Renauld May 29 '13 at 22:09
  • @Sébastien Renault: It does not. But apparent movement of the sun implies either the sun is revolving around the earth or the earth is spinning. I was pointing out that the common question "Does the sun revolve around the earth or the earth revolve around the sun ?" is really made of two logically unrelated parts. But earth spinning disqualify geocentric model (sun revolving around earth). – kriss May 29 '13 at 22:15
  • But ok, partly incorrect. You could have both earth spinning and sun rotating around the earth. That would just change the apparent rotation speed of the sun (just mentally replace the sun by a satellite and you can easily understand that). – kriss May 29 '13 at 22:32
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Foucault pendulum. I don't know how the ancients did it, but it is surely pure classical mechanics.

enter image description here

The animation describes the motion of a Foucault Pendulum at a latitude of 30°N.

ABC
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Man
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I think the Foucault pendulum is the best answer, but for the sake of variety I'll add another very interesting one: the equatorial bulge affecting the figure of the Earth. This is the "pancaking" of the planet due to its rotation. You can measure the geometry of the Earth without leaving its surface, and find that it is bulging in accord with your expectations if that bulge were caused by rotation at the same rate as the one we observe relative to distant stars. As always, there's no such thing as "proof" in physics, but this is strong supporting evidence.

Mike
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An indirect indication that the Earth rotates is the fact that the rotation varies over time. First of all, the orientation of the Earth's axis changes: long-term effects like precession and slow variations in the axial tilt, as well as small short-term variations like nutation. Precession was already known in the Ancient world (Hipparchus, Ptolemy,...) and the change in axial tilt was recognized by people like Fracastoro (in 1538). See the wiki pages for historic background.

The Earth's period of rotation also changes. First of all, the rotation is slowing down, caused by the tidal interaction between the Earth and the Moon: the length of the day increases by about 2 milliseconds per century. Edmond Halley was the first to notice that the orbital period of the Moon had changed compared with ancient records, and the effect was explained in the 18th and 19th century.

These days, we're able to measure the Earth's rotation very precisely, and we find that the rotation varies slightly from day to day. In particular, changes in the atmospheric winds and oceanic currents cause periodic fluctuations in the axial tilt and the period of rotation: an annual fluctuation with an amplitude of 0.34 milliseconds, a semiannual period with an amplitude of 0.29 milliseconds, 10-day fluctuations of the order of 0.1 milliseconds, fluctuations due to El Niño events, etc (see wikipedia, and also this post). Large earthquakes can also change the rotation period by a few microseconds, but these effects prove difficult to measure (see this article on the 2011 Japan earthquake).

Do these variations prove that the Earth rotates? Not directly, but I'd like to hear geocentrists explain how the entire universe can change its rotation, not only over thousands of years but even on a daily basis, when the causes of these variations can be traced back to events on Earth or its orbit.


Edit

Another proof that the Earth rotates, although it can only be measured with modern techniques: aberration.

You're all familiar with this effect: suppose that you're standing in the rain, and there's no wind. Since the rain will fall vertically, you have to hold your umbrella straight up. But now start running. What happens? From your point of view, the rain will no longer fall vertically: you have to tilt your umbrella forward to keep your head dry. A similar phenomenon happens with light: the direction in which you see a beam of light depends on your velocity. This effect is called aberration.

For instance, suppose you have two stars, separated by an angle $\theta$ in a rest frame. If an observer is moving towards the star on the horizontal axis, then he will see the second star at an angle $\varphi$, instead of $\theta$. If the velocity of the observer changes, then the angle $\varphi$ changes, and the star will appear to 'wobble' with respect to stars at different positions.

The orbital velocity $v\approx 30\;\text{km/s}$ of the Earth around the Sun causes an annual aberration: over the period of a year, every star and galaxy will appear to wobble on an ellipse, with a maximum displacement of $v/c\approx 20.5''$ around their mean position, regardless of their distance to the Earth (unlike parallax, which does depend on distance). It was first observed by James Bradley in 1725, and is direct proof that the Earth orbits the Sun.

But there's another, much smaller aberration: a diurnal aberration, caused by the rotation of the Earth around its axis. The effect is greatest for an observer on the equator, who has an equatorial speed of $v = 0.465\;\text{km/s}$, while an observer on the poles will see no effect. For an observer on the equator, the position of every star wobbles on a daily basis, with a maximum displacement of $v/c\approx 0.32''$. It's an incredibly small effect, but it is measurable, and it has to be taken into account when doing high-precision astrometry. Moreover, it proves that the Earth does rotate.

Pulsar
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Anything related to the Coriolis effect (some pretty pictures can be found in the link), i.e. even cannons will be (not precisely, rather seem) deflected because of the earth's rotation.

Ali
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Measuring the geometry of the earth, we find that it has an equatorial bulge. We make no assumptions about the cause of the bulge, though it suggests already that the earth is rotating as @Mike has described.

We measure the acceleration due to gravity at the poles and on the equator. Most of the difference we find is accounted for by the bulge, but there is a $0.3\%$ discrepancy. The acceleration due to gravity is smaller on the equator than we expect. This discrepancy is nicely explained by assuming the earth is rotating. In fact, making this assumption we can make a rough calculation of the period of the earth.

We could go so far as to carefully measure the acceleration due to gravity along different lines of latitude and thus find the acceleration due to gravity as a function of latitude. We would find that these measurements were well described by a model in which the oblate earth were rotating with a period of about a day.

user26872
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Let us check the claim that the earth is rotating about it's own axis. We may choose this axis to be the $z$-axis. The earth can be approximated by a sphere. Consider a pendulum living somewhere on the surface of the earth, initially swinging on a north-south line. The position of the bob is described a vector ${V} = (V^{\theta}, V^{\phi})$ living in the tangent space of this sphere. As the earth rotates, $V$ is parallely transported along the curved sketched out by the earth's rotation, call it $\gamma(t) = (\theta(t), \phi(t))$ (a circle). Then the equation obeyed by $V$ is given by, $$\nabla_{\dot{\gamma(t)}}V^{\alpha} = \dot{\theta}\nabla_{\theta}V^{\alpha} + \dot{\phi}\nabla_{\phi}V^{\alpha} = 0.$$ But since the earth only changes the $\phi$ angle, by rotating, $\dot{\gamma(t)} = (0, \dot{\phi})$ ($ = (0, 2\pi /24\text{hrs})$). The equation for parallel transport thus gives $$\nabla_\phi V^{\theta} = 0,$$ and $$\nabla_{\phi}V^{\phi} = 0.$$ These are simply the covariant derivatives, so that these equations are

$$\partial_{\phi}V^{\theta} + \Gamma^\theta_{\phi \mu}V^{\mu} = 0,$$ $$\partial_{\phi}V^{\phi} + \Gamma^\phi_{\phi \mu}V^{\mu} = 0.$$

An easy computation shows that the non-vanishing christoffel symbols of the sphere are $\Gamma^{\theta}_{\phi \phi} = -\text{sin}{\theta}\text{cos}{\theta},$ $\Gamma^{\phi}_{\phi \theta} = \text{cot}{\theta}.$ These equations become coupled equations as follows: $$\partial_{\phi}V^{\theta} -\text{sin}\theta \text{cos}\theta V^{\phi} = 0,$$ $$\partial_{\phi}V^{\phi} + \text{cot}\theta V^{\theta} = 0.$$ Uncoupling them by solving for $V^{\theta}$ in the second equation and plugging it into the first, we get, $$\partial^2_{\phi}V^{\phi} = -\text{sin}^2 \theta V^{\phi}.$$ This is easy to solve, and from this you get how much the pendulum should swing in the direction of $\phi$, in say a 24 hour period. Now compare with experiment.

  • What's going on here? What level of mathematics/physics do I have to reach to understand what you've written? (I lost you after 'tangent space') – Greg May 30 '13 at 06:26
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    Nothing too fancy, just basic differential geometry (parallel transport is the main concept used here, look it up). The kind you would learn in the first half of a general relativity class. – childofsaturn May 31 '13 at 00:09
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The Sagnac effect can detect absolute rotation. This is used, for example in the ring laser gyroscope used on modern aircraft as navigational devices. Not only is it possible to use this effect to prove that the earth rotates but its precision for detecting variations in the rotation is starting to become competitive with the most precise techniques nowdays: see

David
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