That's a good way to describe the tides. You can think of a permanent bulge in the ocean, pointing toward the moon, with the earth rotating inside the bulge.
yes its true
bulges of water in the ocean are called high tides.
Bulges of water in the ocean caused by gravity are called tidal bulges. These bulges result from the gravitational forces of the moon and sun on Earth's surface, creating high tide at the location of the bulge.
The area between bulges of water in the ocean is known as a trough. This is the part of the water surface that is lower between two adjacent crests. Troughs are typically found in waves and result from the alternating rise and fall of the water.
Bulges in the ocean are called tides. These are the rising and falling motions of the sea, caused by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun on the waters of the Earth.
The ocean bulge and the tides are caused by attraction from the Moon.
It is caused by the moon's gravitational force.
Because the moon's gravity pulls the water towards it. It bulges out in the middle of the ocean, which sucks the water from its outer edges (the shoreline).
it is when the gravitational pull of the moon is the strongest so it creates huge bulges of the ocean water
Due to gravity, ocean water is attracted to areas of high topography and away from areas of low topography on the sea floor, causing bulges and depressions on the ocean surface. Satellite radar can detect these changes in elevation.
The area between bulges of water is a depression or a low-tide area. High tidal bulges have these low-tide areas which would correspond to troughs.
it is called an irrelevant spit. it is called this because it is in between bulges and is basicly what you call irrelevant