Quote from: "Grigori Rasputin"Quote from: "Grigori Rasputin"Quote from: "TheEngineer"Yes, it rotates, just not like Tom says.Care to elaborate? Speed of rotation and how it's determined?TheEngineer? Anyone?Should I just assume that the exact speed of FE rotation is unknown, and that there is no way to determine it? How can this be? Even if FE rotates slower than one revolution per 24 hours, it should still act as a centrifuge, right? The effect would just be smaller.Or if the rotational speed cannot be determined, how can TheEngineer - or anyone else for that matter - be sure that it actually rotates at all?
Quote from: "Grigori Rasputin"Quote from: "TheEngineer"Yes, it rotates, just not like Tom says.Care to elaborate? Speed of rotation and how it's determined?TheEngineer? Anyone?
Quote from: "TheEngineer"Yes, it rotates, just not like Tom says.Care to elaborate? Speed of rotation and how it's determined?
Yes, it rotates, just not like Tom says.
...population who believe in globularism solely on the basis of having been told so?
Quote from: "Grigori Rasputin"Quote from: "Grigori Rasputin"Quote from: "Grigori Rasputin"Quote from: "TheEngineer"Yes, it rotates, just not like Tom says.Care to elaborate? Speed of rotation and how it's determined?TheEngineer? Anyone?Should I just assume that the exact speed of FE rotation is unknown, and that there is no way to determine it? How can this be? Even if FE rotates slower than one revolution per 24 hours, it should still act as a centrifuge, right? The effect would just be smaller.Or if the rotational speed cannot be determined, how can TheEngineer - or anyone else for that matter - be sure that it actually rotates at all?Its not possible to determine, it can only be postulated..
If the FE rotated once per 24 hours, then could it be possible to measure the centrifuge effect near the ice wall (like in Cape Horn or Australia)?