Yes, the moon has a lot of affect on the sea'a tides. This is due to the gravitational pull. The moon has a lot more affect on the tides than the sun does. This is due to the moon being much closer to the earth than the sun.
The gravity of the moon pulls the water of the earth's oceans toward the moon, on both sides of the earth at the same time. High tide is when the ocean facing closest to the moon receives the most gravitational pull, and the other side of the earth, receiving the least gravity has low tide from the lowest gravitational pull. Other types of tide come from when the moon and the sun are both in front of the earth, and their is a larger tide then normal, or when the sun and the moon are on opposite sides of the earth, and the opposing gravitational pulls cause lower than usual tidal pulls.
water is cold so when the moon and the sun makes a tide the place with the tide would be cold.the reason that tides come is because of the gravity of the moon and the sun is pulling the water up to it.
Nope. In fact, over a very very long time, the effect of the moon's presence is to rob some of the Earth's rotation from it.
The effects are the moon phases, eclipses, and the high tide and low tide.
Red Tide is a term that refer to Algae blooms of toxic phytoplankton, it has nothing to do with the ocean tide or the moon's gravity.
The moon does...... That's what my science teacher told me.
The gravity of the moon pulls the water of the earth's oceans toward the moon, on both sides of the earth at the same time. High tide is when the ocean facing closest to the moon receives the most gravitational pull, and the other side of the earth, receiving the least gravity has low tide from the lowest gravitational pull. Other types of tide come from when the moon and the sun are both in front of the earth, and their is a larger tide then normal, or when the sun and the moon are on opposite sides of the earth, and the opposing gravitational pulls cause lower than usual tidal pulls.
The Moon is closer to Earth than the sun.
The moon affect the ocean tides because of the gravitational pull that the moon has. Where the is a high tide, the moon is pulling the water toward it's gravity. The water on the opposite side of Earth, will pull away from the moon.
water is cold so when the moon and the sun makes a tide the place with the tide would be cold.the reason that tides come is because of the gravity of the moon and the sun is pulling the water up to it.
water is cold so when the moon and the sun makes a tide the place with the tide would be cold.the reason that tides come is because of the gravity of the moon and the sun is pulling the water up to it.
A good way of knowing when there is going to be High tides is when there is a full moon out, as the gravitational force of the moon effects our seas, thus giving us waves.
the moon has some sort of magnetism thing that controls whether water is high tide or low tide
There are no seas on the Moon, but it was believed that there were.
It might affect the tide because our moon controls that.
because, when the moon is in diffrent places it changes the gravitational pull of our atmosher which changes the tides :) or something like that!!!
Nope. In fact, over a very very long time, the effect of the moon's presence is to rob some of the Earth's rotation from it.