The stone is pulled down towards the center of the earth. It falls all the way to the middle of the earth once it reaches the middle, theres no more pull of gravity. But the stone is going pretty fast, and there's nothing at the middle of the earth to make it stop (since we dug all the stuff out).
What would happen if you dropped a ball through the earth?
A Ball Dropped Through The Earth Becomes A Permanent Pendulum.What happens to a stone when it is dropped through a hole drilled through the Centre of the earth?
The velocity of the stone is only due to the acceleration due to gravity. The stone experiences no other net acceleration on it. Therefore, it has no acceleration at the centre of the earth as acceleration due to gravity is zero.What happens if you dig a hole to China?
Take a closer look at a globe: China is actually not antipodal to the United States. That would be impossible, since they're both in the Northern Hemisphere. If you dug a hole from anywhere in the lower 48 states straight through the center of the Earth, you'd actually come out… in the middle of the Indian Ocean.Is it possible to fall through the Earth?
The acceleration of gravity is 9.8m/s2 and the radius of the Earth is 6.378 million meters. This means that you would fall through the entire Earth in only 42 minutes!What If You Drilled a Hole Through Earth?
Can we go to Earth core?
Short answer: No. On the large scale you can think of the Earth as a big ball of fluid. Withstanding the pressure of the bottom of the ocean is something that we are barely able to do, and that is only 0.2% of the way to the center of the Earth.How hot is the Earth's core?
Temperature in the inner core is about 5,200° Celsius (9,392° Fahrenheit). The pressure is nearly 3.6 million atmosphere (atm). The temperature of the inner core is far above the melting point of iron.How deep in the Earth can humans go?
Humans have drilled over 12 kilometers (7.67 miles) in the Sakhalin-I. In terms of depth below the surface, the Kola Superdeep Borehole SG-3 retains the world record at 12,262 metres (40,230 ft) in 1989 and still is the deepest artificial point on Earth.How deep the Earth is?
The distance to the center of the Earth is 6,371 kilometers (3,958 mi), the crust is 35 kilometers (21 mi) thick, the mantle is 2855km (1774 mi) thick — and get this: the deepest we have ever drilled is the Kola Superdeep Borehole, which is just 12km deep.Why can't we fall off the Earth?
But the reason you won't fall off the Earth is because of the force of gravity. This pulls us towards the middle of the Earth, and keeps our feet firmly on the ground. Read more: Curious Kids: how does gravity pull things down to Earth? This is why we call the ground “below us” and the sky “above us”.How hot is it 1 mile underground?
Geothermal gradient indicates that on Earth, 1 mile underground would be about 40-45 C (75-80F, just as you said) hotter than on the surface. Unless your underground city lies under permafrost, that would be a definite challenge for human habitation.Has anyone been to the mantle?
No one has ever drilled into the mantle before, but there have been a half dozen serious attempts. Decades ago, the Russians drilled deeper than anyone has ever gone. Their Kola Superdeep Borehole was started in 1970 and still holds the world record for the deepest hole in the ground.What's the deepest we've ever gone?
Vescovo's trip to the Challenger Deep, at the southern end of the Pacific Ocean's Mariana Trench, back in May, was said to be the deepest manned sea dive ever recorded, at 10,927 meters (35,853 feet).Is lava hotter than the Sun?
Lava is indeed very hot, reaching temperatures of 2,200° F or more. But even lava can't hold a candle to the sun! At its surface (called the "photosphere"), the sun's temperature is a whopping 10,000° F! That's about five times hotter than the hottest lava on Earth.How hot is the moon?
Taking the Moon's TemperatureDaytime temperatures near the lunar equator reach a boiling 250 degrees Fahrenheit (120° C, 400 K), while nighttime temperatures get to a chilly -208 degrees Fahrenheit (-130° C, 140 K). The Moon's poles are even colder.