“ |
Originally Posted by James R The Coriolis effect is an apparent force felt by objects moving North or South, due to the Earth's rotation.
|
” |
The coriolis effect affects any object moving along the surface of the Earth, not just those moving northward or southward.
The Coriolis effect when discussed in the context of the Earth is about the horizontal deflection of an object that is moving horizontally, with velocity measured from the perspective of the rotating Earth. There is a vertical deflection called the Eotvos effect due to eastward motion. Vertical motion in turn causes a eastward/westward deflection. I'll ignore the effects on/by vertical motion. I'll also ignore that the Earth is not truly spherical (it is better modeled as an oblate spheroid). Some key concepts regarding the (horizontal) Coriolis acceleration due to horizontal motion:
- The magnitude of the Coriolis acceleration is proportional to speed. Whether the object in question is moving north, south, east, or west doesn't matter in terms of the magnitude of the effect.
- The magnitude of the Coriolis acceleration is proportional to the sine of latitude. The effect is greatest at the poles, zero at the equator, and changes sign at the equator.
- The direction of the Coriolis acceleration is always normal to the velocity. The effect makes moving objects curve to the right in the Northern hemisphere but to the left in the Southern hemisphere.
- Because the effect is always normal to velocity, it does not change the magnitude of the velocity vector. It instead turns the velocity vector.
- The effect is solely the result of looking at things from the perspective of a rotating reference frame. An inertial observer will see zero Coriolis acceleration.