John Freestone
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2008
- Messages
- 1,004
Hi tsig. I know what you're getting at (although I'd have said in the latter case it comes from the wind, but it is so indirectly, via the motion of the cart). It's a weird brainteaser, but Cycrow's question was what forces are different, and the cool thing about equivalent frames is that in these two scenarios (land cart and treadmill cart) the forces when analysed are identical. If the forces are identical, the resulting motions will be identical too.On the treadmill the power to spin the propeller and provide thrust comes from the treadmill motor.
Out in the wind the power to spin the propeller and provide thrust comes from the motion of the cart.
I know it seems odd, but the more you think about different scenarios, the more you will discover a lot of examples of this principle, with regard to forces and motion. Is gravity holding you to your chair, or holding your chair to you? Nature doesn't make a distinction. The cart is propelled by the difference in velocity between a mass of air and a surface. It doesn't matter which we move past the other. It doesn't matter where the energy comes into the system.
Here's a really good thought experiment to help transcend the frame-stuckness some of us have: imagine that I'm testing my cart in what humber calls the 'real wind', one that blows over the 'stationary ground', and I'm using a rather unlikely wind (to say the least) of 1000 miles per hour. I'm all ready for this event, which happens quite rarely, and only at the equator, and it often blows directly from the east toward the west. Off I go in my land cart, pushed by the wind. This is a proper scenario, I'm sure you and humber will agree (other than being utterly made up, of course). I'm blown west by the wind. Maybe my cart is a bit rubbish, I don't manage to achieve windspeed. Maybe it's just good enough to get to windspeed. Maybe it's well built and beats the wind. Let's imagine it at windspeed.
Now, imagine we look down on the Earth from some distance. The Earth is spinning Eastwards at 1000 mph at the equator (it's actually slightly more, but who's counting?), but the wind is moving 1000 mph westwards [ETA: w.r.t. the land; i.e. not moving relative to our 'fixed' position in space] and the cart is sitting there in place below us. It's moving 1000 mph westward relative to the surface, or staying still w.r.t. the wind.
So, what precisely is the difference between that 'real wind' test and a very large treadmill test? Isn't the ground just a large treadmill moving eastwards in stationary air?
If you don't like 1000 mph winds, because that's impossible, just move the experiment to somewhere nearer the poles, where the earth's surface moves at a reasonable speed. Then instead of just pure fantasy, you could actually create the conditions*. Now tell me what's a treadmill and what's a real wind.
*ETA: I mean, you'd still have to wait for the conditions...but the windspeed would be possible. As you move nearer one of the poles the scenario gradually turns from being like a treadmill to being like ynot's turntable.
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