By their gravitational forces and; 3) by their electromagnetic radiation. The Sun affects the Earth by its gravity which keeps the Earth in its orbit, and as I discussed in the section under Moon-Tides, by raising tides in the rocky and watery components of the Earth.
By their gravitational forces and; 3) by their electromagnetic radiation. The Sun affects the Earth by its gravity which keeps the Earth in its orbit, and as I discussed in the section under Moon-Tides, by raising tides in the rocky and watery components of the Earth.
By their gravitational forces and; 3) by their electromagnetic radiation. The Sun affects the Earth by its gravity which keeps the Earth in its orbit, and as I discussed in the section under Moon-Tides, by raising tides in the rocky and watery components of the Earth.
the sun and the moon
You're fishing for "Earth and Moon", but your outlook on the whole matter seriouslyneeds broadening.-- In the case of tides on the Earth, the Sun has almost as much influence on themas the Moon has.-- In principle, every two celestial bodies are responsible for raising tides on each other,as the result of the mutual forces of gravitational attraction between them.
the moon
The sun. Other than the sun and the moon (gravity pull of the moon create the tides) though, the options are limited. Larger celestial bodies such as asteroids can have a significant effect on earths climate, but to my knowledge this has not happened in modern times.
tides are the caused by the gravitation effects of the moon and the sun. each of these celestial bodies have their own timely pattern, but sometimes the sun's pattern and the moon's will synchronize and cause an extra-heavy tide. likewise, sometimes their effects will be diametrically-opposed. an increase in the typical tidal movements could be caused by: * an increase in mass of either the sun or the moon * an increase in proximity of the sun or the moon * another celestial body (comet/asteroid) of a sufficient mass passing close enough to the earth to gravitationally influence the movement of water.
Earth has a total of 4 tides a day 2 high tides and 2 low tides.
Moon and the sun.
The two celestial bodies with the most profound effect upon Earth's tides are Earth's moon and the Sun.
Were it not for the interaction of the Moon's gravity with the Earth's, it would not be there. Gravity keeps it in its orbit, as it does all celestial bodies. The moon's gravity also affects the Earth, causing the tides and geological stresses.
earth
You're fishing for "Earth and Moon", but your outlook on the whole matter seriouslyneeds broadening.-- In the case of tides on the Earth, the Sun has almost as much influence on themas the Moon has.-- In principle, every two celestial bodies are responsible for raising tides on each other,as the result of the mutual forces of gravitational attraction between them.
the earth, moon, and sun
The earth's moon influences (affects) the ocean tides.
the moon
When all three bodies are aligned spring tides are the result
The gravity of the moon pulls the ocean toward it creating the tides.
The gravity of the moon pulls the ocean toward it creating the tides.
None, its the other way around: The Moon influences the tides on Earth