The Delaware Gazette

A moving experience

In my mis­spent youth, I had an expe­ri­ence that pro­foundly changed me and, in fact, accounts for the fact that I have been doing pub­lic work in astron­omy for almost half a century.

One fine evening when I was 12 or so, I watched the moon set behind the trees. As the moon slowly dis­ap­peared, I sud­denly real­ized to my star­tled amaze­ment, that the moon wasn’t set­ting at all. Earth was spin­ning in the oppo­site direc­tion. I knew, I mean really knew, at that moment that I was on a spin­ning ball hurtling through space.

One of the prin­ci­ples that gov­erns our uni­verse is that prac­ti­cally every­thing is spin­ning around — the plan­ets, the stars and even the galax­ies. To the ancients, this prin­ci­ple seems obvi­ous enough. Just go out and fol­low the stars across the sky. The starry dome seems to turn around the North Star once every day.

Of course, they were wrong about the last part. The Earth is a ball that turns on its axis every 24 hours. The stars only seem to move because the Earth moves.

That prin­ci­ple vio­lates sim­ple com­mon sense, and folks like to ask me about it at our pro­grams at Perkins. After all, Earth doesn’t seem to be mov­ing. If you throw a ball into the air, the Earth is turn­ing under it. Why doesn’t it fall behind you?

The ancients asked the same ques­tion. Most peo­ple who thought a bit about it believed that the Earth is a sphere, but they con­cluded that the ball exam­ple was suf­fi­cient proof that the earth was not spinning.

As early as 350 B.C., a Greek philoso­pher named Her­a­clei­des sug­gested that our planet — and not the sky — was turn­ing. He was widely regarded as an idiot.

It wasn’t until 1609 that Galileo pointed his prim­i­tive tele­scope at the sky. He dis­cov­ered that the sun had spots on it, and that the spots moved slowly across the sun’s face. The sun seemed to be turn­ing on its axis once every 27 days. If the sun moves, then why not Earth?

Such weird ideas were still unpop­u­lar. In 1633, the Catholic Church forced Galileo to pub­licly renounce his opin­ions. Galileo even­tu­ally went blind from observ­ing the sun with a tele­scope. Please don’t try to repeat his obser­va­tions at home!

Using more sophis­ti­cated equip­ment than Galileo, Gian Domenico Cassini demon­strated in 1665 that Mars turned on its axis every 24.5 hours. In 1668, he proved that Jupiter rotated once every 10 hours, a star­tling fig­ure given Jupiter’s girth.

The real evi­dence for Earth’s rota­tion built slowly, how­ever. The final proof came, I sup­pose, when astro­nauts on the moon could actu­ally watch the Earth turn.

As it turns out, how fast you are actu­ally mov­ing depends on where you are on Earth. The whole planet turns once every 24 hours. At the equa­tor, the Earth is at its fat­test, so peo­ple down there travel about 24,000 miles in one day. They’re mov­ing at 1,000 miles per hour. In Cen­tral Ohio, the cir­cle we travel in one day is only 16,300 miles around, so we are mov­ing at about 680 mph.

So why don’t our hats blow off? Why does the ball fall straight down? When you jump up, the Earth is turn­ing under­neath you. How is it that you come down in the same place?

Galileo took care of that lit­tle conun­drum 400 years ago with a sim­ple thought exper­i­ment. Let’s say you’re on a fast-moving sail­ing ship and you climb to the top on the high­est mast. If you drop a tool, the ship should con­tinue to move ahead while the ball is falling. The tool should fall into the water.

Of course, it doesn’t. Many sailors have dropped tools from many mast­heads, and the tools always fall straight down.

The rea­son is that the sailor, the tool and the ship are all mov­ing at the same veloc­ity. When the sailor drops the tool, it’s still mov­ing at the same rate and thus trav­els along with the ship. As you move around the Earth in Ohio, you, the ball, the air and every­thing else around you are mov­ing at 680 miles per hour. When you throw the ball up in the air, it’s still mov­ing at 680 mph.

Sci­ence doesn’t make the Earth move. It moves on its own. Still, the Earth moves for me when sci­ence helps explain it, but that isn’t quite good enough. So here is my wish for you, gen­tle read­ers. Just once, I hope that you and your chil­dren and your children’s chil­dren will go out­side together and watch the moon set. I hope that you will feel the Earth move, not just in your head but in your heart where it counts.

Tom Burns is the direc­tor of Ohio Wes­leyan University’s Perkins Obser­va­tory, and he would be very happy to answer your ques­tions or sell you a ticket to one of its upcom­ing Friday-night pro­grams, tlburns@owu.edu, 740–363-1257.

Tom Burns Posted by on May 6 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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