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Old 02-08-2022, 03:02 PM
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Stonius (Markus)
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Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: Melbourne
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gary View Post
Probably around 618 millimetres in Sydney.

So what do you do, take the circumference of the earth and divide it by the number of milliseconds in a day, then multiply that number by 1.59?


I must be doing it wrong (no surprise there!)


I have circumference of the earth at the equator (40,075,017m)
Divided by the number of milliseconds in a day (86,400,000ms)
Which gives 0.46m per millisecond travel.

Multiply by 1.59 and the earth was 0.74m 'early' on the fastest day of rotation.
Which I guess is about what you're saying.


I guess it also means that to stay at the same spot on earth relative to the sun, you'd have to drive at 1,670km/h just to have 'permanent noon'.


If my figures are right (40,075km divided by 24h)


Cool!

Last edited by Stonius; 02-08-2022 at 03:22 PM.
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