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Further Note on "Gravitation Inside A Uniform Hollow Sphere"This article is written
in response to questions received from Claus Olesen. Here is his e-mail
to me: Imagine a straight pipe going all the way through the earth, e.g. being a diameter of the Earth. If the pipe is filled with water, then what is the pressure in the water as function of distance from the center of the Earth? In the Mariana Trench is it roughly 11000m/(10m/1atmosphere) = 1100 atmospheres? If the pipe is empty, e.g. contains vacuum, then what is the traveling time from rest from one end of the pipe to the other? Thank you. Dear Claus, We know that the average density of the earth is about 5.5 times that of water, i.e., 5,500 kg/m3. We will assume that our hypothetical liquid has the same density. We will also assume that our liquid is incompressible so that the density remains uniform throughout the sphere. OK. We wish to calculate the pressure at some depth below the surface. We will use the differential form: dp(r) = -g dr where, We recognize that g inside the earth must be a function of r, i.e., g = g(r). Let's determine what that function actually is before we proceed. First of all, we know from Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation that: g(r) = GM/r2 where G is Newton's universal constant and M is the field generating mass. Let a be a point in the interior of our liquid sphere at a distance ra from the center. Let's find the value of g at a: · We know that
a is on the surface of a sphere of radius ra < 6,400 km. By my previous article, "Gravitation Inside A Uniform Hollow Sphere," we know that the mass contained in this hollow shell contributes nothing to the value of g at a. Thus, the only non-zero contribution must come from the mass inside the sphere of radius ra. This contribution is: g = GM/ ra2. Since our liquid sphere is assumed to have a constant density, we may further write the field generating mass as: M = (4 ra3/3). Combining these last two results, we discover that g inside the earth is a decreasing linear function of the distance r as we approach the center. Dropping the subscript a, we have: g = G(4 r3/3) / r2 = 4Gr/3. Finally: dp(r) = -g dr dp(r) = -(4Gr/3) dr = -(4G2r/3) dr. Integrating the right-hand side between the limits of 6,400,000 m and r yields the interior pressure of the earth as a function of r: p(r) = 2G2(6,400,0002 - r2)/3 where the earth's radius has been expressed in units of meters for dimensional consistency. As a point of interest, setting r = 0 gives an estimate of the hydrostatic pressure at the center of the earth: p = 2G2(6,400,000 m)2/3 = 1.7 x 1011 nt/m2. Let's check this result
using your information on the Mariana Trench. You estimate the pressure
to be 1,100 atm at 11,000 m. We will use the expression obtained above
to calculate the pressure at a depth of 11,000 m in our liquid sphere. p(r) = 2G2(6,400,0002 - r2)/3 where the earth's radius is expressed in m for dimensional consistency. To obtain an estimate of the pressure at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, we need an estimate of the average density r near the earth's surface. Since the earth's surface is about 70% ocean and 30% land, let's use: r = 0.7 x (1,000 kg/m3) + 0.3 x (5,500 kg/m3) = 2,400 kg/m3. If Mariana is 11,000 m in depth, then the corresponding value of r is: 6,400,000 m - 11,000 m = 6,389,000 m ~ 6,390,000 m. The pressure at the bottom of the trench may then be estimated as: p(r)
= 2G2(6,400,0002
- 6,390,0002)/3 = 1.03 x 108 nt/m2 The difference error is (1,100 - 1,030)/1,100 = 6%, which is, overall, not bad! OK, now to the evacuated pipe. An evacuated shaft implies that we may ignore air resistance, so we are dealing with an idealized case. Using our previous results, let's begin with the expression: g = lr, where l = 4G/3. Assuming that the projectile starts at the earth's surface with zero velocity and is dropped into the evacuated shaft, we may next write: dv = g dt = lr dt = - (lr/v) dr, where dv is differential velocity = - dr/dt. This expression yields: v2 dv = -lr dr. Integrating the left-hand side between 0 and v, and the right-hand side between rE and r (where rE is the earth's radius, and v is the velocity at r), we find that: v2 = l(rE2 - r2) or v = Öl (rE2 - r2)½. We now write further: dr = -v dt = - l (rE2 - r2)½ dt where dr is differential distance measured radially; or: dr/[(rE2 - r2)½] = - l dt. Treating this integral as an indefinite integral, we find: arcsin
(r/rE) = l t, or The time it takes the projectile to reach the center of the Earth is found by setting r = rE. Now, l = 2.15 x 10-3 (MKS units), and so: tTo Center = 732 seconds = 12 minutes. A round trip through
the earth and back to the starting point would take 48 minutes = 2,880
seconds, and the oscillating frequency of the projectile would be 3.5
x 10-4 sec-1. |
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