Why doesn’t
the Earth wobble when rotating?
By MUNGAI KIHANYA
The Sunday Nation
Nairobi,
03 February 2013
With all the construction going on, Michael Mwendwa wonders why the mass
of the earth doesn’t get imbalanced. Perhaps Michael is worried that if
there was too much weight on one side, the planet’s rotation might
become wobbly (the way a car with unbalanced wheels wobbles violently)!
It’s a valid concern but one that we shouldn’t worry too much about. The
reason is that the Earth is simply too massive for any human
construction to have significant effect on its motion. Let’s first look
at what kind of mass displacement involved.
Contrary to general expectation, the largest manmade structures are not
buildings or walls. So you can strike off things like the Egyptian
pyramids, the Chinese Great Wall and even the Burj Khalifa
Tower in Dubai from that list.
The largest manmade structures are holes in the ground – mines and dams.
One of them is the Kimberly diamond mine in
South Africa. It is about 470m in
diameter and 800m deep.
In a period of about 40 years (1840s to 1910s), 23 million tonnes of
earth was excavated from the Kimberly mine in search of diamonds. They
extracted only 2.7 tonnes of diamonds! Now you know why this gem is so
expensive.
The Mirny diamond mine in Russia is
another serious contender measuring 1.25km across and 500m deep.
However, at 4km wide and 970m depth, the
Bingham Canyon mine in the USA is clearly the largest manmade
open pit in the world.
But in terms of mass displacement, none of these mines can compete with
the Three Gorges Dam in China. Completed
in 2008, it holds about 40 million cubic metres of water with a surface
area of over 1,000 square kilometres (2km wide at the front wall and
660km long).
To put those figures into perspective, compare it with our Masinga dam:
1.56 million cubic metres of water over 120 square kilometres (also 2km
wide but only 45km long).
Now the 40 million cubic metres of water at the Three Gorges were not
there before the dam was built. They are equivalent to 40 million tonnes
in mass. How does that compare with our planet? Well the mass of the
Earth is about 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 tonnes. That is, 6 followed
by 21 zeroes!
In comparison, the number 40 million has only seven zeros. Thus the
proportion of the planet that was been held up at the dam is 1 in
150,000,000,000,000 (150
trillion)! That’s a very small fraction therefore it doesn’t have any
significant effect on the mass of the Earth.
But even if the Earth was not as massive as it, these manmade structures
would still not have much effect because they are scatter randomly
across the surface of the planet. For example, before the Three Gorges
dam was built, the previous record holder was the Itaipu in South
America – at the boarder between Brazil
and Paraguay.
Finally, let nobody ever cheat you: none of
these structures can be seen from the moon. Indeed, no man made feature
is visible from there, not even the Great Wall of
China!
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