[geocentrism] Re: Centrifugal force.

  • From: "philip madsen" <pma15027@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 21 Oct 2008 06:23:24 +1000

Yes you are correct..  Its the peripheral speed..perhaps... too hard for me.  
But getting back to your original question, The natural shape to which a fluid 
would form is a sphere. around the centre of gravity. There is a bulge at the 
equator, which the maths men have calculated to be correct for the earths rate 
of spin. Likewise a lb of butter weighs more in England than it does in Papua. 
Which means of course water has been moved from the poles to the sea on the 
equator. distinct from other tidal effects. 
 
I believe their assessment. However as the world is not spinning, then as said 
elsewhere this force is due to the aether doing the 24hour spin or rotation 
through and around the earth. The effect is the same as any other body in the 
solar system that is spinning in the aether. Its a matter of relative motions 
between matter and aether. ..  demonstrated only due to the unique place the 
earth occupies.    A stumbling block for the agnostics.. 
Philip. 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: PETER CHARLTON 
  To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 8:50 PM
  Subject: [geocentrism] Re: Centrifugal force.


  I would have thought it was the speed, rather than the number of rotations 
that cause centrifugal force.
  More revolutions cause more speed which is what increases the centrifugal 
force.
  If it was just the number of rotations, why can the toy soldier stand up ok 
near the centre of said record, but move it out a couple of inches whereas, 
still spinning the same amount of times, he falls outward, not from wind 
resistance by the increased speed, but by increased centrifugal force due to be 
further from the point of axis.

  Pete
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: philip madsen 
    To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 7:07 AM
    Subject: [geocentrism] Re: Centrifugal force.


    Peter if the record is only turning 1 rev per day, there cannot be the same 
effect on your toy soldier as happens when it is doing 33 rpm. Im not expert, 
but this seems to be the key. Imagine your record player doing only 1 rev per 
day, and then extending its size to a millionmiles in diameter. The speed 
certainly increases the further out the toy soldier walks, but the centrifugal 
force is tethered to the same centre of gravity.

    Philip. 
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: PETER CHARLTON 
      To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
      Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 9:53 AM
      Subject: [geocentrism] Centrifugal force.


      At the moment at work Iam getting people to think by asking them how, 
with the equator spinning at 1038 miles an hour, and the poles sationary, that 
all the earths water doesnt just slide down to the equator with centrifugal 
force, especially considering how even the slight pull of the moon is enough to 
drag the seas.

      Can you scientific guys give an explaination as to why this doent happen 
if the Earth really is spinning please?
      There must be a formula as to the amount of centrifugal foce that is at 
work at the equator compared to the poles.
      Just putting a toy soldier on a spinning LP record and it flys off as it 
gets away from the middle, how much more so must water?

      Pete Charlton  

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