- #1
michelcolman
- 182
- 4
I just saw a StarTalk video where Neil deGrasse Tyson says that gravity at the poles is lower than at the equator because, even though you are closer to the center, the mass around the equator outside the sphere below you somehow does not count (skip to 4:21 in the video). He is obviously wrong there, no doubt confused with the fact that when you're inside a uniform sphere of matter, the forces from the outer shell offset each other so they can be disregarded. This is not the case at the poles because there's no mass above you to offset the mass around the equator.
However, I then started to wonder about a different effect: even though you are closer to the center of the earth when you're at the poles, much of the mass is pulling with a wider angle so the vertical components are less. At the equator, the mass is further away but at a smaller angle. So what does this work out to? Could it be that the total gravity is higher at the equator and this perfectly offsets the centrifugal (pseudo)force? It might make sense because water tries to take a shape that minimizes potential energy...
(I'm just talking about a theoretical homogenous earth, I know there are local differences due to fluctuations in density)
However, I then started to wonder about a different effect: even though you are closer to the center of the earth when you're at the poles, much of the mass is pulling with a wider angle so the vertical components are less. At the equator, the mass is further away but at a smaller angle. So what does this work out to? Could it be that the total gravity is higher at the equator and this perfectly offsets the centrifugal (pseudo)force? It might make sense because water tries to take a shape that minimizes potential energy...
(I'm just talking about a theoretical homogenous earth, I know there are local differences due to fluctuations in density)
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