The first one i am aware of is the, so called, gyro[spin]-scope[viewer].
The more scientific / "peer reviewed" procedure is known as the michelson gale pearson "experiment".
More modern examples include other types of accelerometers like the mems and the gyrocompass.
The reason this is a trick question is that the michelson gale pearson observation is an aether measurement. It measures the perturbance of the aether, but it cannot discern the cause. As in astronomy/cosmology, it is equally valid to conclude that the earth is spinning and the aether is stationary as it is the reverse, or some combination of both's motion.
Airy's failure shows that it is, in fact, not the earth which moves - but the aether above us (the rotation of the sky).
Aside - there is no reason why the world can't rotate AND not be spherical... People only conflate the two due to their mythological predispositions.
This is kind of a trick question.
The first one i am aware of is the, so called, gyro[spin]-scope[viewer].
The more scientific / "peer reviewed" procedure is known as the michelson gale pearson "experiment".
More modern examples include other types of accelerometers like the mems and the gyrocompass.
The reason this is a trick question is that the michelson gale pearson observation is an aether measurement. It measures the perturbance of the aether, but it cannot discern the cause. As in astronomy/cosmology, it is equally valid to conclude that the earth is spinning and the aether is stationary as it is the reverse, or some combination of both's motion.
Airy's failure shows that it is, in fact, not the earth which moves - but the aether above us (the rotation of the sky).
Aside - there is no reason why the world can't rotate AND not be spherical... People only conflate the two due to their mythological predispositions.
I think you may have misread my comment.
I am of the view that the earth is not rotating - the sky is.
Unlike me, jesuits are all in on cosmology, having made most of it up (from the fiction of "outer space" to the fiction of "the big bang")