Saw an issue in a flat Earther video that caused me to wonder.
Say you have a long pole that spans the distance from Earth to the Sun
but floating somewhere in space. This pole is not compressible and
cannot bend. (built from unobtainium for sake of discussion).
If I push the pole at one end to move it say 5cm. I am not asking the
pole to move anywhere near speed of light. However, doesn't the force
of acceleration I put in at one end propagate to the whole pole
instantly instead of taking 8 minutes to travel ?
No. Your "push" is a compression wave, or sound wave, that propagates at
the speed of sound in the pole.
On 2021-12-23 03:37, Niklas Holsti wrote:
No. Your "push" is a compression wave, or sound wave, that propagates at
the speed of sound in the pole.
Why the speed of sound?
Isn't "speed of sound" the speed at which a
accoustic wave propagages through atmosphere at 1atm?
(and would thus be quite different from one trype of material to
another?
If I get a vibrator to the pole, the vibrations are perpendicular to the pole, and that accelerartion is "local" to where the vibrator touches,
but may spread along portion of the pole at their own leasurely speed.
But as thet are vibration, the back and forth cancels itself overall so
0 net acceleration.
But when I push the pole linearly, it is expected the whole pole will
move and accelerate in one direction.
And this is what bugs me. When I
push it, how is acceleration calculated if the total mass is not
accelerated at the time I impart the force?
Eventually it will, but initially the acceleration propagates at the
speed of sound in the pole. The far end does not move until the
compression wave reaches that end.
On 2021-12-23 06:49, Niklas Holsti wrote:
Eventually it will, but initially the acceleration propagates at the
speed of sound in the pole. The far end does not move until the
compression wave reaches that end.
Thanks for explanation.
Is the compression happening at the atomic level, or at the material
level (like a sponge/spring)?
So when I push that 147 million km long pole, does science know how much
mass I will feel pushing back?
I assume at that scale, I won't see any difference whether the pole
is 147 million km long or 300 million km long?
If I impart 1 Newton at one end, I take it I get an immediate 1 newton
"equal reaction"
and the pole will figure out the push propagates within
itself?
(I assume that if I impart 1 Newton onto the space station, I get the
same reaction against me as uf I imparted 1 newton against that 147
million km long pole?
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