so you dont get stuck out at sea when the tide comes in you dummy
Sea water can vary in temperature depending on location and season. In general, sea water tends to be colder in the morning as it loses heat overnight. However, factors such as sunlight exposure, weather conditions, and currents can also influence the temperature of sea water in the morning.
Yes, the expedition led by Sir James Clark Ross was considered a success. He discovered the Ross Sea, Ross Island, and the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica, providing significant contributions to the exploration of the region.
The North Sea separates Britain from Scandinavia.
Uranus, the sky god, was wounded by Kronos, and his blood fell to the sea, and Aphrodite arose from the sea foam.
run slightly faster due to the decrease in gravity at higher altitudes which results in a shorter period of oscillation for the pendulum.
There were only clocks prior to John Harrison's invention of the "Sea Clock". It was invented to find your current longitude on the earth used for ships at sea. Regular Clocks which used a pendulum were too susceptible to movement, humidity and temerpature for reliability until Harrison's invention of a balance spring and escapement which replaced the pendulum. Later Harrison miniaturized his Sea Clock which resulted in better accuracy and reliability into what is now known as a pocket watch.
It's faster at sea level and slower at the top of a mountain.
Denser, heavier air.
The Earth spins at a precise and known speed. If we use a sextant to observe the height of the Sun above the horizon and note the precise time when it is highest - when it stops going up and starts going back down, at "Local Apparent Noon" - we can look up the Sun's location in our Nautical Almanac and very easily calculate both our latitude and longitude. However, this requires an ACCURATE clock, and in the 1600s and early 1700s, no such clock existed. Oh, there were lots of fairly good clocks, but they were all pendulum clocks - and the one thing you cannot use on a ship at sea is a pendulum clock! The British Royal Navy offered a standing prize for the developer of an accurate spring-driven clock that could be used at sea.
Has anyone really been far as decided to use even go want to do look more like a hammer in the clock pendulum sea saw?
Early sailors used the sun and constellations to fix longitude and latitude before they had clocks. In 1761, John Harrison designed and built a "sea watch" that was accurate to 25 seconds in a trip across the Atlantic. The problem was the change in temperature, pressure and humidity as the ships sailed.
As the force of gravity increases the period would decrease. So shortest period on the sun (if you can keep it intact), then sea level, then mountain top and then moon.
i dont see the sea
Well you should sit down and talk to her. If things dont work u than just dont worry. There are other fish in the sea. But only 1 is for you.
A pendulum clock taken to the top of a hill will likely gain time. This is because the force of gravity is weaker at higher altitudes, causing the pendulum to swing more slowly. The clock will then tick at a slower rate than at sea level, resulting in gaining time.
J. Lamar Worzel has written: 'Pendulum gravity measurements at sea, 1936-59' -- subject(s): Gravity 'Pendulum gravity measurements at sea 1936-1959' -- subject(s): Gravity 'Propagation of sound in the ocean' -- subject(s): Explosions, Sound, Transmission, Underwater acoustics