Chocoholic wrote:dee7o wrote:desertdudeshj wrote:Yes because Tsunamis drive on the left !
Coriolis effect man. You know how when you flush your toilet in Dubai the water always moves anticlockwise. In the Southern hemisphere, it flows clockwise. Clockwise is right to left (you start at the right side of the clock and end up on the left side of the clock) so basically you can say that water in the Southern hemisphere should move towards the left. He probably thinks that if you are driving on the right hand side of the road then you have a greater chance of avoiding tsunamis since they always favor the left side. I don't know if this would practically work though because how much do tsunamis actually spin?
er no, clockwise is left to right!
Ok, think of it this way, if someone punches you with her right arm she would be swinging her arm from left to right in your perspective. Similarly, if you consider the clock's perspective, then clockwise is left to right. If you consider the perspective of the person looking at the clock it is right to left. When you are going to be hit by a tsunami or cyclone, noone cares about the tsunamis perspective. It is the perspective of the soon to be annhilated observer that is important. If the tsunami is moving clockwise, it will be approaching your right. If it approaching you anticlockwise like in Samoa, it will be approaching your left. That is why if you are driving on the right hand side you swerve right. If you considered the tsunami's/clock's perspective, then you would end up driving right into it. The thing is, I know this applies to cyclones and hurricanes but do tsunamis actually even spin?