img

What does Earth receive from Sun?

As per what most people would say is Energy and that is fine but if it is receiving energy where is it going all? We can’t be using all of it at least not all of it. Law of Conservation of Energy states that ”Energy can neither be created nor destroyed; rather, it transforms from one form to another”. Earth should have been a lot hotter of all converters in some way to heat, right? Then what do we actually get from Sun? This was a real puzzler hiding in plain sight. Go and watch the video on YT I know you have nothing better to do on a Sunday😂 Spoiler alert🚨: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . You will need to revisit law of thermodynamics that you read about in middle school.

One of the most important, yet least understood, concepts in all of physics. Head to https://brilliant.org/veritasium to start your free 30-...

https://youtu.be/DxL2HoqLbyA?feature=shared

img
img

BladeRunner007

Fintech Startup

8 months ago

img

FussyError18

Cisco

8 months ago

img

BladeRunner007

Fintech Startup

8 months ago

See more comments
img

majboormajdoor

Stealth

8 months ago

img

TallTales69

Unemployed

8 months ago

img

FussyError18

Cisco

8 months ago

Sign in to a Grapevine account for the full experience.

Discover More

Curated from across

img

Misc on

by salt

Gojek

[Thread] What is your favourite math equation?

TLDR: I was reading up on the Navier Stokes equations today and it is so elegant that it might be my favourite math equation. Equation 1: ∇u = 0 (conservation of mass) states that the divergence of the velocity vector u is zero, meaning there is no net change in fluid mass. Equation 2: ρ Du/Dt = -∇p + μ∇^2 u + ρF (conservation of momentum) expresses Newton's second law for fluid flow. It balances the acceleration of fluid particles (LHS) with internal forces (pressure and viscosity) and external forces (gravity or other external influences) on the RHS. This equation is foundational for modelling various fluid dynamics scenarios, from celestial bodies like stars and galaxies to F1 cars. Long Version: Here's how it works: Equation 1: ∇u = 0 (conservation of mass) So, u is velocity that can be represented as (u,v,w) vector, where u,v,w are x,y,z components of the vector. ∇u tells us that we need to do a partial derivative on u. So, ∇u = ∂u/∂x + ∂v/∂y + ∂w/∂z = 0 or, the partial derivative of every component wrt corresponding direction is 0. Equation 2: ρ Du/Dt = -∇p + μ∇^2 u + ρ F (conservation of momentum) LHS: Since, u is velocity, then Du/Dt is acceleration and ρ is density. Newton's second law, F = m x a, applies here. Wherein, Du/Dt is acceleration of fluid particles and m is the density of the fluid. RHS: -∇p + μ∇^2 are the internal forces of particles hitting into each other while F represents the external force. F in most cases is gravity, so one can replace it with g. However, if you put in electromagnetism then, you can combine Navier-Stokes with Maxwell's equations. This has over time led to the development of magnetohydrodynamics, ie how stars and galaxies form. You can model the growth of our sun with this. ∇p is our pressure gradient and represents the change in pressure. Essentially, fluids move from high pressure to low pressure. μ∇^2 represents viscous forces yielding from viscosity. Imagine this can model aerodynamics of F1 cars.

img