Coriolis Effect
Coriolis Effect
Coriolis effect
For the psychophysical perception effect, see Coriolis effect (perception).
In physics, the Coriolis effect is a deflection of moving objects when
they are viewed in a rotating reference frame. In a reference frame with
clockwise rotation, the deflection is to the left of the motion of the
object; in one with counter-clockwise rotation, the deflection is to the
right. Although recognized previously by others, the mathematical
expression for the Coriolis force appeared in an 1835 paper by French
scientist Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis, in connection with the theory of
water wheels. Early in the 20th century, the term Coriolis force began
to be used in connection with meteorology.
A commonly encountered rotating reference frame is the Earth. The Coriolis effect is caused by the rotation of the
Earth and the inertia of the mass experiencing the effect. Because the Earth completes only one rotation per day, the
Coriolis force is quite small, and its effects generally become noticeable only for motions occurring over large
distances and long periods of time, such as large-scale movement of air in the atmosphere or water in the ocean.
Such motions are constrained by the surface of the earth, so only the horizontal component of the Coriolis force is
generally important. This force causes moving objects on the surface of the Earth to be deflected in a clockwise
sense (with respect to the direction of travel) in the Northern Hemisphere and in a counter-clockwise sense in the
Southern Hemisphere. Rather than flowing directly from areas of high pressure to low pressure, as they would in a
non-rotating system, winds and currents tend to flow to the right of this direction north of the equator and to the left
of this direction south of it. This effect is responsible for the rotation of large cyclones (see Coriolis effects in
meteorology).
Coriolis effect 2
History
Italian scientists Giovanni Battista Riccioli and his assistant Francesco Maria Grimaldi described the effect in
connection with artillery in the 1651 Almagestum Novum, writing that rotation of the Earth should cause a
cannonball fired to the north to deflect to the east. The effect was described in the tidal equations of Pierre-Simon
Laplace in 1778.
Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis published a paper in 1835 on the energy yield of machines with rotating parts, such as
waterwheels. That paper considered the supplementary forces that are detected in a rotating frame of reference.
Coriolis divided these supplementary forces into two categories. The second category contained a force that arises
from the cross product of the angular velocity of a coordinate system and the projection of a particle's velocity into a
plane perpendicular to the system's axis of rotation. Coriolis referred to this force as the "compound centrifugal
force" due to its analogies with the centrifugal force already considered in category one.[1] The effect was known in
the early 20th century as the "acceleration of Coriolis", and by 1920 as "Coriolis force".
In 1856, William Ferrel proposed the existence of a circulation cell in the mid-latitudes with air being deflected by
the Coriolis force to create the prevailing westerly winds.[2]
Understanding the kinematics of how exactly the rotation of the Earth affects airflow was partial at first. Late in the
19th century, the full extent of the large scale interaction of pressure gradient force and deflecting force that in the
end causes air masses to move 'along' isobars was understood.Wikipedia:Citation needed
Formula
See also: Fictitious force
In non-vector terms: at a given rate of rotation of the observer, the magnitude of the Coriolis acceleration of the
object is proportional to the velocity of the object and also to the sine of the angle between the direction of
movement of the object and the axis of rotation.
The vector formula for the magnitude and direction of the Coriolis acceleration is
where (here and below) is the acceleration of the particle in the rotating system, is the velocity of the particle
in the rotating system, and Ω is the angular velocity vector which has magnitude equal to the rotation rate ω and is
directed along the axis of rotation of the rotating reference frame, and the × symbol represents the cross product
operator.
The equation may be multiplied by the mass of the relevant object to produce the Coriolis force:
.
See fictitious force for a derivation.
The Coriolis effect is the behavior added by the Coriolis acceleration. The formula implies that the Coriolis
acceleration is perpendicular both to the direction of the velocity of the moving mass and to the frame's rotation axis.
So in particular:
• if the velocity is parallel to the rotation axis, the Coriolis acceleration is zero.
• if the velocity is straight inward to the axis, the acceleration is in the direction of local rotation.
• if the velocity is straight outward from the axis, the acceleration is against the direction of local rotation.
• if the velocity is in the direction of local rotation, the acceleration is outward from the axis.
• if the velocity is against the direction of local rotation, the acceleration is inward to the axis.
The vector cross product can be evaluated as the determinant of a matrix:
Coriolis effect 3
Causes
The Coriolis effect exists only when one uses a rotating reference frame. In the rotating frame it behaves exactly like
a real force (that is to say, it causes acceleration and has real effects). However, Coriolis force is a consequence of
inertia, and is not attributable to an identifiable originating body, as is the case for electromagnetic or nuclear forces,
for example. From an analytical viewpoint, to use Newton's second law in a rotating system, Coriolis force is
mathematically necessary, but it disappears in a non-accelerating, inertial frame of reference. For example, consider
two children on opposite sides of a spinning roundabout (carousel), who are throwing a ball to each other. From the
children's point of view, this ball's path is curved sideways by the Coriolis effect. Suppose the roundabout spins
counter-clockwise when viewed from above. From the thrower's perspective, the deflection is to the right. From the
non-thrower's perspective, deflection is to left. For a mathematical formulation see Mathematical derivation of
fictitious forces.
An observer in a rotating frame, such as an astronaut in a rotating space station, very probably will find the
interpretation of everyday life in terms of the Coriolis force accords more simply with intuition and experience than
a cerebral reinterpretation of events from an inertial standpoint. For example, nausea due to an experienced
pushWikipedia:Please clarify may be more instinctively explained by Coriolis force than by the law of inertia. See
also Coriolis effect (perception). In meteorology, a rotating frame (the Earth) with its Coriolis force proves a more
natural framework for explanation of air movements than a non-rotating, inertial frame without Coriolis forces. In
long-range gunnery, sight corrections for the Earth's rotation are based upon Coriolis force.[3] These examples are
described in more detail below.
The acceleration entering the Coriolis force arises from two sources of change in velocity that result from rotation:
the first is the change of the velocity of an object in time. The same velocity (in an inertial frame of reference where
the normal laws of physics apply) will be seen as different velocities at different times in a rotating frame of
reference. The apparent acceleration is proportional to the angular velocity of the reference frame (the rate at which
the coordinate axes change direction), and to the component of velocity of the object in a plane perpendicular to the
axis of rotation. This gives a term . The minus sign arises from the traditional definition of the cross
product (right hand rule), and from the sign convention for angular velocity vectors.
The second is the change of velocity in space. Different positions in a rotating frame of reference have different
velocities (as seen from an inertial frame of reference). In order for an object to move in a straight line it must
therefore be accelerated so that its velocity changes from point to point by the same amount as the velocities of the
frame of reference. The effect is proportional to the angular velocity (which determines the relative speed of two
different points in the rotating frame of reference), and to the component of the velocity of the object in a plane
perpendicular to the axis of rotation (which determines how quickly it moves between those points). This also gives
a term .
Coriolis effect 4
The Rossby number is the ratio of inertial to Coriolis forces. A small Rossby number signifies a system which is
strongly affected by Coriolis forces, and a large Rossby number signifies a system in which inertial forces dominate.
For example, in tornadoes, the Rossby number is large, in low-pressure systems it is low and in oceanic systems it is
around 1. As a result, in tornadoes the Coriolis force is negligible, and balance is between pressure and centrifugal
forces. In low-pressure systems, centrifugal force is negligible and balance is between Coriolis and pressure forces.
In the oceans all three forces are comparable.
An atmospheric system moving at U = 10 m/s (22 mph) occupying a spatial distance of L = 1,000 km (621 mi), has a
Rossby number of approximately 0.1. A baseball pitcher may throw the ball at U = 45 m/s (100 mph) for a distance
of L = 18.3 m (60 ft). The Rossby number in this case would be 32,000. Needless to say, one does not worry about
which hemisphere one is in when playing baseball. However, an unguided missile obeys exactly the same physics as
a baseball, but may travel far enough and be in the air long enough to notice the effect of Coriolis. Long-range shells
in the Northern Hemisphere landed close to, but to the right of, where they were aimed until this was noted. (Those
fired in the Southern Hemisphere landed to the left.) In fact, it was this effect that first got the attention of Coriolis
himself.
Applied to Earth
An important case where the Coriolis force is observed is the rotating Earth. Unless otherwise stated, directions of
forces and motion apply to the Northern Hemisphere.
Intuitive explanation
As the Earth turns around its axis, everything attached to it turns with it (imperceptibly to our senses). An object that
is moving without being dragged along with this rotation travels in a straight motion over the turning Earth. From
our rotating perspective on the planet, its direction of motion changes as it moves, bending in the opposite direction
to our actual motion. When viewed from a stationary point in space above, any land feature in the Northern
Hemisphere turns counter-clockwise, and, fixing our gaze on that location, any other location in that hemisphere will
rotate around it the same way. The traced ground-path of a freely moving body traveling from one point to another
will therefore bend the opposite way, clockwise, which is conventionally labeled as "right," where it will be if the
direction of motion is considered "ahead" and "down" is defined naturally.
Coriolis effect 5
Rotating sphere
Consider a location with latitude φ on a sphere that is rotating around
the north-south axis. A local coordinate system is set up with the x axis
horizontally due east, the y axis horizontally due north and the z axis
vertically upwards. The rotation vector, velocity of movement and
Coriolis acceleration expressed in this local coordinate system (listing
components in the order east (e), north (n) and upward (u)) are:
When considering atmospheric or oceanic dynamics, the vertical velocity is small, and the vertical component of the
Coriolis acceleration is small compared to gravity. For such cases, only the horizontal (east and north) components
matter. The restriction of the above to the horizontal plane is (setting vu = 0):
Accordingly, an eastward motion (that is, in the same direction as the rotation of the sphere) provides an upward
acceleration known as the Eötvös effect, and an upward motion produces an acceleration due west.
For additional examples in this article see cannon on turntable and tossed ball. In other articles, see rotating spheres,
apparent motion of stationary objects, and carousel.
Distant stars
The apparent motion of a distant star as seen from Earth is dominated by the Coriolis and centrifugal forces.
Consider such a star (with mass m) located at position r, with declination δ, so Ω · r = |r| Ω sin(δ), where Ω is the
Earth's rotation vector. The star is observed to rotate about the Earth's axis with a period of one sidereal day in the
opposite direction to that of the Earth's rotation, making its velocity v = –Ω × r. The fictitious force, consisting of
Coriolis and centrifugal forces, is:
Coriolis effect 6
where uΩ = Ω−1Ω is a unit vector in the direction of Ω. The fictitious force Ff is thus a vector of magnitude m Ω2|r|
cos(δ), perpendicular to Ω, and directed towards the center of the star's rotation on the Earth's axis, and therefore
recognizable as the centripetal force that will keep the star in a circular movement around that axis.
Meteorology
Perhaps the most important impact of the Coriolis effect is in the
large-scale dynamics of the oceans and the atmosphere. In meteorology
and oceanography, it is convenient to postulate a rotating frame of
reference wherein the Earth is stationary. In accommodation of that
provisional postulation, the centrifugal and Coriolis forces are
introduced. Their relative importance is determined by the applicable
Rossby numbers. Tornadoes have high Rossby numbers, so, while
tornado-associated centrifugal forces are quite substantial, Coriolis
forces associated with tornados are for practical purposes negligible.
Because currents are driven by the movement of wind across the water
This low-pressure system over Iceland spins
of the ocean, the Coriolis effect also affects the movement of the counter-clockwise due to balance between the
ocean’s currents and therefore hurricanes as well. Many of the ocean's Coriolis force and the pressure gradient force.
largest currents circulate around warm, high-pressure areas called
gyres. Though the circulation is not as significant as that in the air, the
deflection caused by the Coriolis effect is what creates the spiraling
pattern in these gyres. The spiraling wind pattern helps the hurricane
form. The stronger the force from the Coriolis effect, the faster the
wind will spin and pick up additional energy, increasing the strength of
the hurricane.
This pattern of deflection, and the direction of movement, is called Buys-Ballot's law. In the atmosphere, the pattern
of flow is called a cyclone. In the Northern Hemisphere the direction of movement around a low-pressure area is
counter-clockwise. In the Southern Hemisphere, the direction of movement is clockwise because the rotational
dynamics is a mirror image there. At high altitudes, outward-spreading air rotates in the opposite direction.[4]
Cyclones rarely form along the equator due to the weak Coriolis effect present in this region.
Inertial circles
An air or water mass moving with speed subject only to the Coriolis force travels in a circular trajectory called an
'inertial circle'. Since the force is directed at right angles to the motion of the particle, it will move with a constant
speed around a circle whose radius is given by:
where is the Coriolis parameter , introduced above (where is the latitude). The time taken for the
mass to complete a full circle is therefore . The Coriolis parameter typically has a mid-latitude value of about
−4 −1
10 s ; hence for a typical atmospheric speed of 10 m/s (22 mph) the radius is 100 km (62 mi), with a period of
about 17 hours. For an ocean current with a typical speed of 10 cm/s (0.22 mph), the radius of an inertial circle is
1 km (0.6 mi). These inertial circles are clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere (where trajectories are bent to the
right) and counter-clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
If the rotating system is a parabolic turntable, then is constant and the trajectories are exact circles. On a rotating
planet, varies with latitude and the paths of particles do not form exact circles. Since the parameter varies as
the sine of the latitude, the radius of the oscillations associated with a given speed are smallest at the poles (latitude =
±90°), and increase toward the equator.
Coriolis effect 8
Eötvös effect
See also: Eötvös effect
The practical impact of the "Coriolis effect" is mostly caused by the horizontal acceleration component produced by
horizontal motion.
There are other components of the Coriolis effect. Eastward-traveling objects will be deflected upwards (feel
lighter), while westward-traveling objects will be deflected downwards (feel heavier). This is known as the Eötvös
effect. This aspect of the Coriolis effect is greatest near the equator. The force produced by this effect is similar to
the horizontal component, but the much larger vertical forces due to gravity and pressure mean that it is generally
unimportant dynamically.
In addition, objects traveling upwards (i.e., out) or downwards (i.e., in) will be deflected to the west or east
respectively. This effect is also the greatest near the equator. Since vertical movement is usually of limited extent
and duration, the size of the effect is smaller and requires precise instruments to detect. However, in the case of large
changes of momentum, such as a spacecraft being launched into orbit, the effect becomes significant the fastest and
most fuel-efficient path to orbit is a launch from the equator which curves to a directly eastward heading.
to rotate in a counter-clockwise direction (the experiment was performed in Boston, Massachusetts, in the Northern
Hemisphere). This was repeated and the results averaged to make sure the effect was real. The report noted that the
vortex rotated, "about 30,000 times faster than the effective rotation of the earth in 42° North (the experiment's
location)". This shows that the small initial rotation due to the earth is amplified by gravitational draining and
conservation of angular momentum to become a rapid vortex and may be observed under carefully controlled
laboratory conditions.[6]
Special cases
Cannon on turntable
See also: Fictitious force § Crossing a carousel
The animation at the top of this article is a
classic illustration of Coriolis force. Another
visualization of the Coriolis and centrifugal
forces is this animation clip [7].
Given the radius R of the turntable in that
animation, the rate of angular rotation ω,
and the speed of the cannonball (assumed
constant) v, the correct angle θ to aim so as
to hit the target at the edge of the turntable
can be calculated. Cannon at the center of a rotating turntable. To hit the target located at position 1
on the perimeter at time t = 0 s, the cannon must be aimed ahead of the target at
The inertial frame of reference provides one angle θ. That way, by the time the cannonball reaches position 3 on the periphery,
way to handle the question: calculate the the target also will be at that position. In an inertial frame of reference, the
time to interception, which is tf = R / v . cannonball travels a straight radial path to the target (curve yA). However, in the
frame of the turntable, the path is arched (curve yB), as also shown in the figure.
Then, the turntable revolves an angle ω tf in
this time. If the cannon is pointed an angle θ
= ω tf = ω R / v, then the cannonball arrives at the periphery at position number 3 at the same time as the target.
Coriolis effect 10
In the turntable frame (denoted B), the x- y Successful trajectory of cannonball as seen from the turntable for three angles of
launch θ. Plotted points are for the same equally spaced times steps on each curve.
axes rotate at angular rate ω, so the
Cannonball speed v is held constant and angular rate of rotation ω is varied to
trajectory becomes: achieve a successful "hit" for selected θ. For example, for a radius of 1 m and a
cannonball speed of 1 m/s, the time of flight tf = 1 s, and ωtf = θ → ω and θ have
the same numerical value if θ is expressed in radians. The wider spacing of the
and three examples of this result are plotted plotted points as the target is approached show the speed of the cannonball is
in the figure. accelerating as seen on the turntable, due to fictitious Coriolis and centrifugal
forces.
Accelerations
Acceleration components at an earlier time (top) and at arrival time at the target
(bottom)
Coriolis effect 11
Components of Acceleration
To determine the components of acceleration, a general expression is used from the article fictitious force:
in which the term in Ω × vB is the Coriolis acceleration and the term in Ω × ( Ω × rB) is the centrifugal acceleration.
The results are (let α = θ − ωt):
Producing Accelerations
Producing a centrifugal acceleration:
Also:
The "centripetal" component of acceleration resembles that for circular motion at radius rB, while the perpendicular
component is velocity dependent, increasing with the radial velocity v and directed to the right of the velocity. The
situation could be described as a circular motion combined with an "apparent Coriolis acceleration" of 2ωv.
However, this is a rough labelling: a careful designation of the true centripetal force refers to a local reference frame
that employs the directions normal and tangential to the path, not coordinates referred to the axis of rotation.
These results also can be obtained directly by two time differentiations of rB (t). Agreement of the two approaches
demonstrates that one could start from the general expression for fictitious acceleration above and derive the
trajectories shown here. However, working from the acceleration to the trajectory is more complicated than the
reverse procedure used here, which, of course, is made possible in this example by knowing the answer in advance.
As a result of this analysis an important point appears: all the fictitious accelerations must be included to obtain the
correct trajectory. In particular, besides the Coriolis acceleration, the centrifugal force plays an essential role. It is
easy to get the impression from verbal discussions of the cannonball problem, which are focussed on displaying the
Coriolis effect particularly, that the Coriolis force is the only factor that must be considered; emphatically, that is not
so. A turntable for which the Coriolis force is the only factor is the parabolic turntable. A somewhat more complex
situation is the idealized example of flight routes over long distances, where the centrifugal force of the path and
aeronautical lift are countered by gravitational attraction.
The ball travels in the air, and there is no net force upon it. To the stationary observer the ball follows a straight-line
path, so there is no problem squaring this trajectory with zero net force. However, the rotating observer sees a curved
path. Kinematics insists that a force (pushing to the right of the instantaneous direction of travel for a
counter-clockwise rotation) must be present to cause this curvature, so the rotating observer is forced to invoke a
combination of centrifugal and Coriolis forces to provide the net force required to cause the curved trajectory.
Bounced ball
The figure describes a more complex
situation where the tossed ball on a turntable
bounces off the edge of the carousel and
then returns to the tosser, who catches the
ball. The effect of Coriolis force on its
trajectory is shown again as seen by two
observers: an observer (referred to as the
"camera") that rotates with the carousel, and
an inertial observer. The figure shows a
bird's-eye view based upon the same ball
speed on forward and return paths. Within
each circle, plotted dots show the same time Bird's-eye view of carousel. The carousel rotates clockwise. Two viewpoints are
illustrated: that of the camera at the center of rotation rotating with the carousel
points. In the left panel, from the camera's
(left panel) and that of the inertial (stationary) observer (right panel). Both
viewpoint at the center of rotation, the tosser observers agree at any given time just how far the ball is from the center of the
(smiley face) and the rail both are at fixed carousel, but not on its orientation. Time intervals are 1/10 of time from launch to
locations, and the ball makes a very bounce.
The ball's path through the air is straight when viewed by observers standing on the ground (right panel). In the right
panel (stationary observer), the ball tosser (smiley face) is at 12 o'clock and the rail the ball bounces from is at
position one (1). From the inertial viewer's standpoint, positions one (1), two (2), three (3) are occupied in sequence.
At position 2 the ball strikes the rail, and at position 3 the ball returns to the tosser. Straight-line paths are followed
because the ball is in free flight, so this observer requires that no net force is applied.
Coriolis effect 14
Discs cut from cylinders of dry ice can be used as pucks, moving
around almost frictionlessly over the surface of the parabolic turntable,
allowing effects of Coriolis on dynamic phenomena to show
themselves. To get a view of the motions as seen from the reference
frame rotating with the turntable, a video camera is attached to the
turntable so as to co-rotate with the turntable, with results as shown in
the figure. In the left panel of the figure, which is the viewpoint of a
stationary observer, the gravitational force in the inertial frame pulling
the object toward the center (bottom ) of the dish is proportional to the
distance of the object from the center. A centripetal force of this form
The forces at play in the case of a curved surface.
causes the elliptical motion. In the right panel, which shows the Red: gravity
viewpoint of the rotating frame, the inward gravitational force in the Green: the normal force
rotating frame (the same force as in the inertial frame) is balanced by Blue: the resultant centripetal force.
the outward centrifugal force (present only in the rotating frame). With
these two forces balanced, in the rotating frame the only unbalanced
force is Coriolis (also present only in the rotating frame), and the
motion is an inertial circle. Analysis and observation of circular
motion in the rotating frame is a simplification compared to analysis or
observation of elliptical motion in the inertial frame.
Because this reference frame rotates several times a minute rather than
Object moving frictionlessly over the surface of a
only once a day like the Earth, the Coriolis acceleration produced is
very shallow parabolic dish. The object has been
many times larger and so easier to observe on small time and spatial released in such a way that it follows an elliptical
scales than is the Coriolis acceleration caused by the rotation of the trajectory.
Earth. Left: The inertial point of view.
Right: The co-rotating point of view.
In a manner of speaking, the Earth is analogous to such a turntable.
The rotation has caused the planet to settle on a spheroid shape, such
that the normal force, the gravitational force and the centrifugal force exactly balance each other on a "horizontal"
surface. (See equatorial bulge.)
Coriolis effect 15
The Coriolis effect caused by the rotation of the Earth can be seen indirectly through the motion of a Foucault
pendulum.
Molecular physics
In polyatomic molecules, the molecule motion can be described by a rigid body rotation and internal vibration of
atoms about their equilibrium position. As a result of the vibrations of the atoms, the atoms are in motion relative to
the rotating coordinate system of the molecule. Coriolis effects will therefore be present and will cause the atoms to
move in a direction perpendicular to the original oscillations. This leads to a mixing in molecular spectra between the
rotational and vibrational levels from which Coriolis coupling constants can be determined.
Insect flight
Flies (Diptera) and moths (Lepidoptera) utilize the Coriolis effect when flying: their halteres, or antennae in the case
of moths, oscillate rapidly and are used as vibrational gyroscopes.[11] See Coriolis effect in insect stability. In this
context, the Coriolis effect has nothing to do with the rotation of the Earth.
References
[1] Dugas, René and J. R. Maddox (1988). A History of Mechanics (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=vPT-JubW-7QC& pg=PA374).
Courier Dover Publications: p. 374. ISBN 0-486-65632-2
[2] Retrieved on 1 January 2009.
[3] The claim is made that in the Falklands in WW I, the British failed to correct their sights for the southern hemisphere, and so missed their
targets. For set up of the calculations, see
[4] Cloud Spirals and Outflow in Tropical Storm Katrina (http:/ / earthobservatory. nasa. gov/ Newsroom/ NewImages/ images.
php3?img_id=17026) from Earth Observatory (NASA)
[5] Emery, C. Eugene, Jr. (May 1, 1995). "X-Files coriolis error leaves viewers wondering" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080105055918/
http:/ / www. encyclopedia. com/ doc/ 1G1-16836639. html). Skeptical Inquirer
[6] (Vorticity, Part 1) (http:/ / web. mit. edu/ fluids/ www/ Shapiro/ ncfmf. html). Web.mit.edu. Retrieved on 8 November 2011.
[7] http:/ / www. youtube. com/ watch?v=49JwbrXcPjc
[8] Here the description "radially inward" means "toward the axis of rotation". That direction is not toward the center of curvature of the path,
however, which is the direction of the true centripetal force. Hence, the quotation marks on "centripetal".
[9] When a container of fluid is rotating on a turntable, the surface of the fluid naturally assumes the correct parabolic shape. This fact may be
exploited to make a parabolic turntable by using a fluid that sets after several hours, such as a synthetic resin. For a video of the Coriolis effect
on such a parabolic surface, see Geophysical fluid dynamics lab demonstration (http:/ / www-paoc. mit. edu/ labweb/ lab5/ gfd_v. htm) John
Marshall, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
[10] For a java applet of the Coriolis effect on such a parabolic surface, see Brian Fiedler (http:/ / mensch. org/ physlets/ inosc. html) School of
Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma.
[11] "Antennae as Gyroscopes", Science, Vol. 315, 9 February 2007, p. 771
Coriolis effect 16
Further reading
Historical
• Grattan-Guinness, I., Ed., 1994: Companion Encyclopedia of the History and Philosophy of the Mathematical
Sciences. Vols. I and II. Routledge, 1840 pp.
1997: The Fontana History of the Mathematical Sciences. Fontana, 817 pp. 710 pp.
• Khrgian, A., 1970: Meteorology — A Historical Survey. Vol. 1. Keter Press, 387 pp.
• Kuhn, T. S., 1977: Energy conservation as an example of simultaneous discovery. The Essential Tension, Selected
Studies in Scientific Tradition and Change, University of Chicago Press, 66–104.
• Kutzbach, G., 1979: The Thermal Theory of Cyclones. A History of Meteorological Thought in the Nineteenth
Century. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 254 pp.
Coriolis effect 17
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coriolis effect.
• The definition of the Coriolis effect from the Glossary of Meteorology (http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/
glossary/search?id=coriolis-force1)
• The Coriolis Effect — a conflict between common sense and mathematics (http://web.archive.org/web/
20050906101226/http://met.no/english/topics/nomek_2005/coriolis.pdf) PDF-file. 20 pages. A general
discussion by Anders Persson of various aspects of the coriolis effect, including Foucault's Pendulum and Taylor
columns.
• Anders Persson The Coriolis Effect: Four centuries of conflict between common sense and mathematics, Part I: A
history to 1885 (http://www.meteohistory.org/2005historyofmeteorology2/01persson.pdf) History of
Meteorology 2 (2005)
• 10 Coriolis Effect Videos and Games (http://weather.about.com/od/weathertutorials/tp/coriolisvideos.htm)-
from the About.com Weather Page
• Coriolis Force (http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/CoriolisForce.html) – from ScienceWorld
• Coriolis Effect and Drains (http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/phy00/phy00733.htm) An article from
the NEWTON web site hosted by the Argonne National Laboratory.
• Catalog of Coriolis videos (http://www.imaginascience.com/articles/sciencesphysiques/mecanique/coriolis/
coriolis4.php)
• Coriolis Effect: A graphical animation (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcPs_OdQOYU), a visual earth
animation with precise explanation
• An introduction to fluid dynamics (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=khRil3tWYEA) SPINLab Educational
Film explains the Coriolis effect with the aid of lab experiments
• Do bathtubs drain counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere? (http://www.straightdope.com/classics/
a1_161.html) by Cecil Adams.
• Bad Coriolis. (http://www.ems.psu.edu/~fraser/Bad/BadCoriolis.html) An article uncovering
misinformation about the Coriolis effect. By Alistair B. Fraser, Emeritus Professor of Meteorology at
Pennsylvania State University
• The Coriolis Effect: A (Fairly) Simple Explanation (http://stratus.ssec.wisc.edu/courses/gg101/coriolis/
coriolis.html), an explanation for the layperson
• Observe an animation of the Coriolis effect over Earth's surface (http://www.classzone.com/books/
earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es1904/es1904page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization)
• Animation clip (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49JwbrXcPjc) showing scenes as viewed from both an
inertial frame and a rotating frame of reference, visualizing the Coriolis and centrifugal forces.
• Vincent Mallette The Coriolis Force @ INWIT (http://www.inwit.com/inwit/writings/coriolisforce.html)
• NASA notes (http://pwg.gsfc.nasa.gov/stargaze/Srotfram.htm)
• Interactive Coriolis Fountain (http://andygiger.com/science/e-coriolis/index.html) lets you control rotation
speed, droplet speed and frame of reference to explore the Coriolis effect.
• Nigeianschoolsonline- The Coriolis Effect (http://nigerianschoolsonline.com.ng/index.php/article/
1419-the-coriolis-effect)
• "Sur les équations du mouvement relatif des systèmes de corps" (Coriolis, 1831 & 1835), online and analyzed on
BibNum (http://www.bibnum.education.fr/physique/mecanique/
sur-les-equations-du-mouvement-relatif-des-systemes-de-corps) [click 'à télécharger' for English version]
• "Sur le mouvement d’un corps qui tombe d’une grande hauteur" (Laplace, 1803), on BibNum (http://www.
bibnum.education.fr/physique/mecanique/sur-le-mouvement-d-un-corps-qui-tombe-d-une-grande-hauteur)
[analysis by A. Persson gives several calculation methods for the Coriolis effect]
Article Sources and Contributors 18
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