tides Flashcards
what is a flood current?
As the tide rises, water moves towards the shore. This is called a flood current. As the tide rises, water moves towards the shore. This is called a flood current.
what causes tides?
• Tides are caused by the gravitational forces exerted on the earth by celestial bodies in direct proportion to their mass
what is the difference in mass of the sun and moon?
The sun has 27 million times the mass of the moon. One might expect it to be dominant tide producing force.
why has the sun got less impact than the moon on tides?
However, the gravitational force exerted by a celestial body decreases rapidly as the distance from the earth increases.
what is the gravitational force equation?
F= Gm1M2 / d^2. F is the gravitational force. M1 and M2 are the masses of the 2 objects. D is the distance between the 2 objects. G is the universal gravitational constant.
why does the moon have a stronger effect than the sun?
• However, although the sun to earth is larger than moon-earth, the tidal forces varies with the inverse CUBE of distance, and the moon is much closer to the earth, so the moon has a stronger effect on the tide than the sun.
how are the tidal forces produced?
• The tidal forces aren’t produced by the absolute pull of gravity exerted by the sun and the moon, but by the differences in the gravitational fields produced by the 2 bodies across the earths surfaces.
how does the moons distance to the earth cause stronger forces?
Because the moon is so much closer to the earth than the sun, it’s gravitational force varies much more strongly over the surface of the earth than the gravitational force field of the sun.
what do the tidal forces depend on?
• These tidal forces, depend on the inverse cube of distance. This is why tidal forces on earth from the sun are so much smaller than those on the moon.
what is the net effect percentage of the moon and the sun?
• The net effect is that the moon contributes about 70% to the tides, while the sun contributes 30% on average.
why dont small bodies of water have tides?
• In smaller bodies such as lakes, swimming pools, gravitational differences over small distances are so slight, they have a negligible affect.
what are atmospheric tides?
• As well as the oceanic tides, there are atmospheric tides and terrestrial tides, affecting the solid earth. Atmospheric tides are negligible for every day phenomena, drowned by weather and solar thermal tides. The amplitude of terrestrial tides can reach about 55 cm at the equator.
why must the planets be constrained in their orbit?
• As 2 planetary bodies orbit each other, they must be constrained in their orbit by a centripetal force that prevents each from flying off in a straight line.
what is the centripetal force?
• The centripetal force is supplied by the gravitational attraction between them.
why is the centripetal force needed to maintain the planets in orbit?
• Because every part of each body rotates through an orbital path of the same radius, the centripetal force required to maintain the bodies in orbit, is the same at all points and on each of the bodies.
how much more in percentage is the moons gravitational pull than the earths?
• The moons gravitational attraction is about 3% grater at the earths surface nearest the moon.
ween these points. The bulge moves around the earth as the earth rotates and the earth and the moon rotate around each other.
why is the moons gravitational pull greater than the earths?
• Because the centripetal force is the same at all points, there is a net excess gravitational force on the side of the earths nearest the moon, and a net deficit of gravitational force on the side farthest from the moon. This is called the tidal poll or tide-generating force.
in a ring around the earths halfway bet
how does the earths gravity allow water to not be pulled towards the sun?
• At the point of the earths surface nearest the moon, there is a slight tidal pull. Water is pulled upwards towards the moon at this point. However, the earths gravity, which is very strong, acts directly opposite the tidal pull at this location.
what is the tidal pull component?
• At every point except directly under the moon and exactly on the other side of the earth, the tidal pull has a component that acts parallel to the earths surface. This component of tidal pull cannot be compensated by the earths gravity and therefore causes the water to flow in the direction of the force.
what is the net result of the tidal forces?
• The net result of the tidal forces actin on the earths oceans in to move water towards points nearest the moon and farthest from the moon. This movement creates bulges of elevated water surfaces at these points, and a depression of the water surface