Tides Flashcards
Tides time and & amplitude
The time and & amplitude of high tide varies from place-to-place and from day-to-day
largest when new moon or full moon
Tides
- Long period, shallow water waves
- driver (disturbing force) = gravity from sun & moon
- extremely predictable
- longest of all waves, wavelength = 1/2 Earth’s circumference
- shallow water wave
Importance of the tides
- Intertidal zone
- sea level rise and sunny day flooding (flooding from sea level rise happens during the highest high tides)
- tidal energy generation (tidal energy generation can harness both potential and kinetic energy from the tides)
- ocean currents & mixing in coastal regions
- marine hazards
- surfing & fun (severn bore)
- cultural & spiritual connections to the ocean (mont saint-michel)
What causes the tides?
Equilibrium theory of tides
- simplified model of tidal forcing
- originally dveeloped by Newton (late 1600s)
- considers gravitational pull between earth, moon and sun
- considered rotational effects of earth and moon around their common centers of mass
- explains why: there are two high tides per day, one high tide can be bigger than the other, there are spring and neap tides
Equlibrium theory assumptions
- earth is a sphere covered with water to a unifrom depth,no continents
- ignore the effects of friction
- instantaneous equilibrium (ocean can move into place to become in equilibrium with gravity field)
- to start, just consider effect of moon (ignore the sun)
The earth-moon system
- moon does not revolve around the Earth’s center
- it revolves around the earth-moon center of mass (barycenter)
Newtons law of gravitation
Fg = Gm1m2 / r^2
Fg = gravitational force
m = mass
r = distance between the objects
If mass increases, gravitational force increases
If distance increases, then gravitational force greatly increases
Formation of two tidal bulges
Centrifugal force
an ‘apparent’ outward force that an object in orbit ‘feels’
Centripetal force
a real force that keeps an object in orbit (gravity provides the force for earth/moon orbit)
Gravitational force from moon
Towards the moon everywhere, dercreases with distance from
Resultant force
Mismatch between centripetal force and gravitation force
Tide-generating force is the horizontal component of the resultant force
Water piles up
Result
- Tidal bulges stay aligned with Earth-moon axis,
- Earth rotates beneath tidal bulges, producing cycle of high and low tides
- semi-diurnal tide (high tide every 12.4 hours)
Why not exactly 12 hours?
- lunar day is 24 hr and 50 min (longer than solar day)
- high tides are every 12.4 hrs (12 hr, 25 min) = 2 bulges lunar day