4.7 Article

Inertial motion on the earth's spheroidal surface

Journal

CHAOS
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0123896

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. US NSF
  2. [1808225]

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This article studies the inertial motion of smooth and frictionless objects on the rotating Earth in a rotating frame of reference. A new class of motion called "circumpolar waves" is identified and illustrated using CorioVis, a freely available Coriolis visualization software. The article also provides calculations for experimentally relevant frequencies, zonal drifts, and latitude ranges.
As seen by an observer in the rotating frame, the earth's small spheroidal deformations neutralize the centrifugal force, leaving only the smaller Coriolis force to govern the inertial motion of objects that move on its surface, assumed smooth and frictionless. Previous studies of inertial motion employ weakly spheroidal equations of motion that ignore the influence of the centrifugal force and yet treat the earth as a sphere. The latitude dependence of these equations renders them strongly nonlinear. We derive and justify these equations and use them to identify, classify, name, describe, and illustrate all possible classes of inertial motion, including a new class of motion called circumpolar waves, which encircle both poles during each cycle of the motion. We illustrate these classes using CorioVis, our freely available Coriolis visualization software. We identify a rotational/time-reversal symmetry for motion on the earth's surface and use this symmetry to develop and validate closed-form small-amplitude approximations for the four main classes and one degenerate class of inertial motion. For these five classes, we supply calculations of experimentally relevant frequencies, zonal drifts, and latitude ranges.

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