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People Are Confused Why Helicopters Don’t Fly Up And Let The Earth Rotate Beneath Them

December 2, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

It has come to our attention that a few people out there are a little confused why helicopters and planes do not reach their destinations by simply flying straight up into the air and then allowing the Earth to rotate beneath them.

“If I fly straight up in a helicopter and hover there, why doesn’t the earth continue to spin underneath me?” one poster asks Reddit, adding, “Why doesn’t it spin independently of me and I end up in another country or something?”

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Let’s not shame anyone for not knowing why this wouldn’t work; it’s pretty fun to explain anyway, involving some basic (but fun) physics principles.

For a start, imagine you could take a really big jump up into the air (on a non-windy day, for simplicity) at the equator, where the Earth’s spin is around 1,670 kilometers per hour (1,037 miles per hour ). Let’s put you on a trampoline, and assume you can achieve airtime of around 3 seconds.

Where would you expect to land? If you subscribe to the “helicopters should just fly up for a while and then I’ll get to Italy” understanding of physics, then your answer should be 1.39 kilometers (0.86 miles) to the west of your trampoline.

If airplanes and helicopters could stay “stationary” in the air and the ground below them whizzed by beneath them at 1,670 kilometers per hour (1,037 miles per hour), or 27.83 kilometers per minute (17.29 miles per minute) and 0.46 kilometers per second (0.29 miles per second), it would also apply to you. So if you jumped into the air for a grand total of 3 seconds, this would place you 1.39 kilometers (0.86 miles) to the west of where you were before.

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Now, you’ll notice that the world isn’t filled with children flying off their trampolines and hurtling through the air at speeds faster than commercial airliners. 

You move with the Earth because of your inertia, or the tendency for objects in motion to remain in motion in a straight line at the same velocity unless another force acts upon them. This is why when you leap directly into the air, be it directly from the ground or inside a windowless truck, you land where you began. 



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Moving in another direction requires a force in that direction (for example, jumping forward or an airplane expelling mass). Planes and helicopters do not have magical properties that excuse them from inertia, and so when they take off from the spinning Earth, they must expend energy to move you to, say, Hawai’i.

Another misunderstanding is assuming that our atmosphere is somehow static while the Earth spins beneath it. This is simply not the case. As the Earth spins, it drags most of our atmosphere along with it by frictional forces. 

If the atmosphere were not dragged with our planet, you could utilize the insane relative wind speeds to decrease flight time, but you’d probably not be concerned with such problems as “long flights” when you are being battered constantly by incredibly high winds every moment of your waking life.

So you cannot speed up flights by hovering, or moving against the rotation of the Earth. In fact, flying west (against the rotation of the Earth) takes a little longer than flying east.

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“The reason for quicker flights while flying eastwards is jet streams,” Simple Flying explains. “Put simply, these are fast-flowing, narrow air currents in the atmosphere found at high altitudes.”

This does have a little to do with the Earth’s rotation, as well as the atmosphere being heated by the Sun. The closer you are to the equator, the faster the Earth spins, and this affects jet streams.

“The closer you get to the poles, the smaller the track a point takes in its daily rotation,” NASA explains. “At 60° North or South latitude, the track is only half the distance that it is at the equator, and so a point travels only half as fast. Air (or water) moving from high latitudes to low then tends to lag, and a person on the surface would feel a wind blowing out of the east.” 

“On the other hand, air moving from low latitudes to high is deflected westwards. This also means that moving air or water is deflected to the right in the northern hemisphere, and to the left in the southern hemisphere.”

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So the rotation of the Earth does (indirectly) affect flight times through its effect on wind speed and direction. But you cannot simply take a plane or helicopter into the air and wait for the Earth to pass beneath you; we are not living in Looney Tunes.

All “explainer” articles are confirmed by fact checkers to be correct at time of publishing. Text, images, and links may be edited, removed, or added to at a later date to keep information current. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

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Source Link: People Are Confused Why Helicopters Don't Fly Up And Let The Earth Rotate Beneath Them

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