Guest guest Posted March 12, 2006 Report Share Posted March 12, 2006 Here's something that ran through my mind a few years ago, at least the general idea. Let's go on the basis that we have a construction team that can build a shallow pool 1 inch deep and 100 miles in diameter, with it being perfectly placed, with the bottom perfectly flat and level at the mathematical center of the circular pool, with the bottom of the pool a precise mathematical plane (zero imperfections: *perfectly* flat, and the center exactly tangent with the diameter of the center of earth). Now here is where things get entertaining: think about what will happens when you fill the pool with exactly the volume of water to cover a 100 mile diameter circle 1 inch deep with exactly that volume of water as given by the volume formula for that cylinder (ie. 1 inch high, 100 miles in diameter). Please note I'm not asking for the actual volume of water, and the dimensions given are purely arbitrary: the real dimensions (until you get to a small enough scale) are irrelevant to this discussion, not affecting the outcome. What is the final result, and why is that? (note I already have the answer) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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