The beauty of the web: Shape of the earth

by | Friday, March 27, 2009

While searching for information for my previous posting on using eclipses to see, I came across an interesting paper that provided yet another way of figuring out the shape of the Earth.

Lynch, D.K. (2005). Turbulent ship wakes: further evidence that the Earth is round. Applied Optics, 44(27). 5759 – 5762.

First some context, see this image below:


View aft (south): ship’s wake extending to southern horizon (20050802a11).
Photo credit: B. Cuthbertson


As the paper says:

Viewed from aboard the ship, the turbulent stern wake appears as a long narrow whitish streak extending aft of the boat from the stern to the horizon.

If there Earth were flat the wake would converge to a sharp point on the horizon, an infinite distance away. But this is NOT what we see (see photo above). What we DO see is a triangle truncated at the horizon – suggesting that the horizon was not infinitely far away. The paper continues:

From a single observation, a careful observer might deduce that the Earth could be either round or cylindrical. Changing the ship’s direction by 90 degrees and observing the same wake profile, however, would eliminate the cylindrical possibility. In this paper, we show that measurements of the turbulent wake’s shape at the horizon could allow a sailor to deduce the Earth’s spherical shape and its size.

You must read the complete paper to see just how cool this is.

A few randomly selected blog posts…

TPACK Newsletter, Issue #18, December 2013

TPACK Newsletter, Issue #18: December 2013 Welcome to the eighteenth edition of the (approximately bimonthly) TPACK Newsletter! TPACK work is continuing worldwide. This document contains recent updates to that work that we hope will be interesting and useful to you,...

Games, claims, genres & learning II

Aroutis Foster and I recently published a chapter in the Handbook of research on effective electronic gaming in education (I had posted about it earlier here). The handbook seeks to provide a comprehensive coverage of the use of electronic games in multiple fields....

Is the web making us stupid?

... or just narrow? I just discovered Britannica blog, a pretty lively virtual space for intelligent discussion. How I had not come across it earlier is a mystery - but again that is the beauty of the web. Anyway, there is an ongoing discussion there about how the web...

Of hernias and hiccups, the evolutionary story

Interesting article in Scientific American about how flaws in our biology reveal our evolutionary history. Steven Gould talked about it in his famous essay on The Panda's Thumb. This is a wonderful argument for Darwinian evolution since it points not to perfection...

McLuhan on Silver Lining for Learning (5/3)

McLuhan on Silver Lining for Learning (5/3)

This is the fifth of what was supposed to be a three post-series about how media influence our thinking. The first post, uses the invention of writing and print to unpack the meaning of McLuhan’s statement, “The medium is the message.” The second post, focuses on a...

We feel fine

We Feel Fine is a web-installation, "a self-organizing particle system," art project that is powerful and touching - building as it does on people's emotions, harvested from blog postings from around the world. As the designers say, "We hope it makes the world seem a...

Twittering a tale

My favorite short short story is by Hemmingway. It is all of six words long - but boy, does it pack a punch. It goes, "For sale, baby shoes, never used." Wow! It turns out that such short stories are not merely a novelty. The advent of Twitter and microblogging, with...

Engineering Education, past & future II

A couple of weeks ago I made a presentation (with Neeraj Buch) to a group of engineering educators from India. This was a meeting organized by the College of Engineering and the Indo-US Collaboration for Engineering Education. Having made this presentation once I had...

Modeling human behavior: The new dark art of silicon sampling

Modeling human behavior: The new dark art of silicon sampling

A couple of months ago I had written this post, On merging with our technologies – which was essentially quotes from a conversation Ezra Klein had with the novelist Mohsin Hamid. I finished the post with a quote speaking the dangers of predictive technologies on human...

1 Comment

  1. Denkspiele

    Amaaazing post, truly amazing, i have never thought of that, I still wonder though howcome the line stays like that, i have never tried that on a ship, but next time i am at sea i will definately look for it.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Denkspiele Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *