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  • Derek: A couple of years ago my friend Destin

  • and I wanted to definitively answer the

  • question: does water actually swirl the

  • opposite direction down the drain in the

  • other hemisphere? At the time, I was

  • living in Sydney, Australia, and Destin

  • was in Huntsville, Alabama. Those are

  • about the same latitude, just opposite

  • sides of the Equator, so we created two

  • videos that were meant to be watched

  • simultaneously, and if you want to

  • synchronize them yourself, you can click

  • the link in the description, but we also

  • recognize that that was a hassle for

  • some people, particularly watching on

  • mobile devices, and that's why I'm now

  • releasing this extra wide video of both

  • videos synchronized. The Simpsons did a

  • whole episode based on toilet flushing

  • the opposite direction in Australia. Plus,

  • other shows have supposedly demonstrated

  • this effect.

  • Destin: So I have seen documentaries

  • that seemed to indicate that which

  • hemisphere you're in determines which

  • way the water is going to swirl, but

  • there's this other group of people, and

  • they seem really confident that it

  • doesn't matter where you're at, the

  • water's going to swirl however it wants.

  • Derek: so is this a real effect or not?

  • Hank: the application of this principle to

  • draining water in Earth's two hemispheres

  • is just bunk.

  • Destin: But if you ever just look

  • for yourself and figured out which way your

  • toilets swirls,

  • Derek: if you try it yourself

  • you'll find inconsistent results.

  • Destin: Here in Alabama I've noticed that some turn

  • counterclockwise and some go clockwise

  • Derek: this sink sometimes drains one way and

  • sometimes the other way.

  • Destin: You see, most will it have little jets in it, so the

  • swirl direction is determined by the

  • design of the toilet and not which

  • hemisphere you're in.

  • Derek: In any container of

  • water there's always going to be some

  • rotation: the water is not perfectly

  • still, and it is this, rather than the

  • hemisphere, that determines which way the

  • water will swirl down the drain.

  • Derek: so it's a myth: crossing the equator does not

  • mean the toilet's going to change

  • directions. But what if we come into the

  • garage and do a more controlled

  • experiment?

  • Derek: But what if we could

  • eliminate all motion from the water?

  • Destin: This is a one and a half meter kiddie pool.

  • Derek: I have here a five foot wide kiddie pool.

  • Destin: Instead of filling the pool with no vorticity at

  • all, I'm going against the way it's

  • supposed to drain.

  • So I'm trying to fill

  • it with a flow going clockwise.

  • Derek: I actually fill the pool in the

  • anti-clockwise direction to be sure that

  • any clockwise motion we see is no

  • due to the way I filled the pool.

  • Destin: So let's let the water settle for a complete day

  • so that we know that it's perfectly still.

  • Derek: I've left this water sitting here for 24

  • hours. So it seems like I damped all of

  • the motions from the filling.

  • Destin: I'm not going to reach in and pull a plug out

  • because that would induce some vorticity.

  • I'm going to use this valve that I have

  • connected to the bottom of the pool.

  • Derek: I really hope this works. Destin, wish me luck.

  • Destin: Good luck Derek.

  • Derek: I'm about to pull

  • the plug.

  • Destin: okay opening the valve in

  • Both: three, two, one

  • Destin: Water should be flowing

  • Derek: And the pool is draining. But you can't see any

  • motion of the water just yet.

  • been flowing for a couple of minutes and I

  • haven't seen anything yet, so we're going to

  • put some dye in it.

  • Derek: To help us see where the water is blowing I'm going to put

  • some food coloring in on the four

  • cardinal directions around the pool.

  • Destin: Check it out, it's like a tornado like right off

  • the bat.

  • We got a counterclockwise rotation.

  • We filled it up clockwise, and now

  • it's going counterclockwise.

  • Derek: You can clearly see that the water is

  • flowing clockwise, in this direction, and

  • that makes sense because that's how it

  • should flow in the southern hemisphere

  • due to the Earth's rotation.

  • Destin: We have a kiddie pool in my garage, and the whole

  • Earth is rotating and the water's going

  • counterclockwise because I'm in the

  • northern hemisphere. It's real! This is real!

  • Derek: But you can see what a tiny little

  • effect it is and what extraordinary

  • lengths I had to go to to see this

  • effect. So really, you're not going to see

  • it in the bathtub and you're not going

  • to see it in a sink or in a toilet

  • because there are other sources of

  • angular Momentum that totally wash out this effect.

  • Destin: we just proved it because we

  • just eliminated variables.

  • Destin: The Coriolis Effect is real.

  • Derek: The Coriolis Effect, There you have it. It works!

  • To understand how it works, imagine a pool

  • with one edge touching the South Pole.

  • Destin: Think about a pool near the North Pole.

  • Derek: the pool is stationary relative to Earth,

  • but every day it's actually completing one full revolution.

  • Destin: the Earth is spinning on its axis, so the pool spins around the

  • pole once a day.

  • Derek: Now you can see the side

  • of the pool furthest from the pole

  • travels much farther every day than the

  • side right next to the pole.

  • Destin: the pool is moving but the part that's

  • closest to the Equator has more momentum,

  • and the part that's closest to the pole has less.

  • Derek: So the outer side of the pool is

  • moving fastest towards the east and as

  • you get closer to the pole the velocity

  • decreases down to zero.

  • Destin: Think about these velocities relative to the drain in the middle.

  • Derek: Now, imagine we drain the pool

  • Destin: When we pull the plug, all the water

  • starts moving towards the middle.

  • Derek: Water from the far side is moving too fast

  • relative to the drain, and so it gets out

  • ahead, whereas water from near the pole

  • is going too slow, and so it lags behind.

  • Destin: The side nearest the equator is going

  • faster, so that water outruns the drain,

  • but the water nearest the pole is going

  • slower, so it falls behind.

  • Both: So when the water approaches the drain it swirls

  • (counter)clockwise.

  • Destin: this is the reason

  • hurricanes swirl counterclockwise in

  • the northern hemisphere,

  • Derek: And this is the

  • reason cyclones swirl clockwise in the

  • southern hemisphere.

  • Destin: The center of the

  • hurricane has lower pressure, just like a

  • drain, so the hurricane swirls just like our pool.

  • Derek: The higher pressure air rushes into

  • the eye of the storm, and just like in

  • our pool, swirls in the direction

  • dictated by the hemisphere.

  • Both: And that's the truth about toilet swirls.

  • [End of Sync]

  • Derek: Hey, I hope

  • you enjoyed that, and thanks for watching.

  • If you haven't subscribed to Smarter

  • Every Day, Destin's channel, yet then

  • click here, or if you want to see his

  • latest video, click here, and if you're

  • not subscribed to Veritasium for some

  • reason, you can do that by clicking here,

  • or see my latest right here. [disappears]

Derek: A couple of years ago my friend Destin

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