Tides Flashcards

1
Q

Tides time and & amplitude

A

The time and & amplitude of high tide varies from place-to-place and from day-to-day
largest when new moon or full moon

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2
Q

Tides

A
  • 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
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3
Q

Importance of the tides

A
  • 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)
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4
Q

What causes the tides?

A

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

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5
Q

Equlibrium theory assumptions

A
  • 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)
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6
Q

The earth-moon system

A
  • moon does not revolve around the Earth’s center
  • it revolves around the earth-moon center of mass (barycenter)
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7
Q

Newtons law of gravitation

A

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

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8
Q

Formation of two tidal bulges

A
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9
Q

Centrifugal force

A

an ‘apparent’ outward force that an object in orbit ‘feels’

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10
Q

Centripetal force

A

a real force that keeps an object in orbit (gravity provides the force for earth/moon orbit)

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11
Q

Gravitational force from moon

A

Towards the moon everywhere, dercreases with distance from

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12
Q

Resultant force

A

Mismatch between centripetal force and gravitation force

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13
Q

Tide-generating force is the horizontal component of the resultant force

A

Water piles up

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14
Q

Result

A
  • 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)
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15
Q

Why not exactly 12 hours?

A
  • 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
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16
Q

Why do the two daily high tides have different amplitudes in some places?

A

Declamation to the Earth relative to the plane of the equator

17
Q

Diurnal vs semidiurnal tides

A
18
Q

Why does the tidal amplitude change with phase of the moon?

A
  • the sun’s effect: sun’s gravity also attracts ocean, but has smaller effect
  • 28 day tidal cycle
  • spring tides and neap tides