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Observant Muslims are strongly encouraged to visit the Kaaba at least once in their lifetimes, and walk around it seven times counterclockwise.
All of that sea of human-powered torque could be used to generate at least an electrostatic charge using some typical brush-type system, so that it could
be more likely to be struck with lightning in some impressive fashion. Or maybe turn an appropriately-geared generator flywheel.
So there's actually a paper out there...
http://www.savap.or...2)/2014(5.2-07).pdf Complete bollocks to encourage the faithful it seems... [RayfordSteele, Jul 07 2015]
Rotating_20Kabba_20Hajj
Why not go further and turn the entire event into a giant generator? [xenzag, Jul 07 2015]
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What happens if someone walks clockwise? |
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If the crowd is large enough, is its direction of
pointless milling determined by Coriolis forces? |
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What does the rotation have to be relative to? Could
people not save energy by just sitting down
somewhere near the kaba for a week? |
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"The best way to discharge the body of positive electrical charge is by placing the forehead on
the ground more than once [Ref]. As the Earth has negative charge, it discharges the positive
charge from the body. Scientific studies have proved that Mecca and the Kaaba are at the
center of the Earths axis [Ref] Hence, the Islamic practice of offering prayers to the creator
facing the Kaaba leads an optimization of discharging the positive charge from the body." |
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I think it would be interesting just to see it attract lint and flotsam from the prayer mats and goat hairs floating around. |
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//at the center of the Earths axis// now is the centre of the axis at the centre of the earth, since from there the axis is equally infinitely long in either direction? Or is that true of every point on the axis? Or, if you stand at the South Pole, is the axis below you infinitely longer than the axis above? |
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//From this paper... // If they're that crazy, it's just
as well they're not violent. |
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Or are we envisioning the axis as a line, but if you zoom in close enough it gets a bit fuzzy or pixellated, so at super high magnification you can see a sharper line down the centre of the actual axis itself (which has gone a bit blurred), and that sharper line is the centre of the axis? Presumably then you could zoom in a bit more untill the centre of the axis became fuzzy, and make a new sharp line to be the centre of the centre of the axis? |
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Shock the casbah, shock the casbah
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Electrostatics aren't much good for power generation; high voltages, very low currents. And that would also require efficiently insulating the Kaabah from contact with the earth. |
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Electromagnets would let you build an alternator, but the rotational speed would be very low. |
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A treadmill or turntable might have possibilities. |
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Great for random godlike effects though. |
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Maybe it could power an orrery... |
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Isn't an idea like this how 21q got his account
deleted? |
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