The moon is actually moving away from the earth, very slowly. This is caused by some interesting tidal effects. Someday hundreds of thousands or millions of years from now there will be no such thing as a total solar eclipse because the moon will be too distant to completely block the face of the sun. If the moon were ever to get closer, we had better hope that it also gets a little faster. If it didn't it would come crashing down eventually and catastrophically. The closer orbiting bodies are to their hosts the faster they move through their orbits. At one time it was theorized that the moon formed by being literally thrown off by the earth in the days when the earth was nothing but molten rock. Somehow, people thought, the surface bulged at one point and a clump of material broke free. One problem with this theory is that extrapolating backwards from the moon's current distance and velocity, at the time of its break from earth it would have had to be moving in its orbit at a velocity that is impossibly fast. This can't have been the moon's origin.
Spring tides (which are a little higher than average) occur when the Sun, Moon and Earth are pretty much lined up; at the new moon and the full moon. Lower-than-average "neap" tides happen at the 1st and 3rd quarter moon phases.
I have the same question :/ Hope someone helps you.
At the quarter moon phase, the gravity of the sun and the moon are working at right angles to each other, partially canceling out their tidal effects. This is when you'll get the highest low tides or lowest high tides, or "neap tides".
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High tides happen when the moon is overhead, as the gravity pulls the mass of water on earth toward it. Low tides are the opposite, when the moon is below, under your feet, it is pulling the watery mass of the oceans away from your side of the planet. The shape or apparent phase of the moon has absolutely nothing to do with this effect.
If the moon were to be destroyed there would still be tides. This would be because of the sun still being in assistance and affecting the tides.
Tides would become stronger.
Tides would become stronger.
High tides wouldn't be as high and low tides wouldn't be as low.
we would have no tides and night would be pitch black
if there were no moon, there would be no light in the sky at night (earth would be a lot darker at night, earth's days would be longer (earth will rotate slower), and there will be no tides (the moon pulls the tides)
What matters heres is the Moon's mass, as well as its distance. With a more massive Moon (and in the same orbit), the tides would of course be stronger.
the tides and was would go ballistic and there would be tsunamis everywhere and lots of us would die
It would be brighter then just a moon, and tides would be different.
If you mean "tides" as in waves... Tides happen from the moon's gravity pulling up on the water.
Then there would be no nice full moons. The tides would also be quite a bit weaker (we would still have tides due to the Sun's gravity).
the tides would go away it would be dark at night the beach would be no fun