answersLogoWhite

0

the gravitational pull of the moon and its current location.
The moon. Or more accurately, the gravitational effects between the earth and the moon.
The gravitational effects of the Moon, and to a lesser extent the sun. However, The water does NOT rise because of the Moon's gravity pulling on the water... that would not explain why the water on the opposite side of the earth ALSO rises. To be more precise... It's not the gravity itself, it's the Inertial effects of orbital mechanics in a gravitationally bound orbit. Tides are caused by the fact that any orbit is based upon the center of gravity of that object, and yet objects can be large enough to extend both inside and outside the orbital path dictated by their center of mass. for example: When a long thin object, such as a rocket booster, is in an orbit long enough, without artificial stabilization, it will naturally tend to orient is long axis roughly radial to its orbit. This is because of tidal tension. The end of the rocket nearest the earth is in a lower orbit... and the further end is in a higher orbit. But both ends are orbiting at the same velocity as the rocket's center of gravity... The lower end is moving a little too slowly for that lower orbit.. and the higher end is moving a little too fast for its orbit. Thus the high end experiences negative gravity... as its angular momentum creates an inertial component accelerating inward. And the low end experience the exact opposite, an inertial component accelerating upward. The center of the rocket is constantly pulling both ends to its orbital path and velocity. Only the structure of the rocket is preventing the two ends from flying off in opposite directions. One to a higher orbit, the other to a lower orbit. In a steep enough gravitational field, these tidal forces can be strong enough to tear the booster in two... Indeed... these are the forces that prevent any large moon from remaining intact within a certain radius of both Saturn and Jupiter. The tidal stress tears them into pieces. The exact same forces apply to the Earth and moon, High tide occurs when the moon is either directly overhead, or directly on the opposite side of the earth. The water on BOTH sides of the earth, being unrestrained, rises in direct proportion to the inertial component imparted by their orbit around the Earth/Moon barycenter. It is the exact same phenomenon as with the booster. And the fact that the Moon does not have uniform mass is why its rotation is tidally locked- with its longest mass axis being radial to its orbit. Eventually, Earth will also become tidally locked as the moon bleeds our rotational energy into a higher and higher orbit. The Sun exerts a much less noticeable effect, because, relative to is orbit, the diameter of the earth represents such an small difference in orbital speeds. So there are two different sets of tidal humps in the oceans... One major, the other minor. But when the moon and the sun are on precisely opposite sides of the earth, or the same side... the solar tide is superimposed on top of the height of the lunar tide.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is the force that is responsible for tides?

The moon's gravitational force is what causes the ocean tides to change. How Stuff Works has a great diagram and explanation of how this happens.


What causes the tides to rise and fall and fall on Earth?

The tidal effect (guess where it got that name) caused by the gravity of the Sun and Moon.


Who causes the tides?

The tides are caused by the moon's gravitational force.


What causes the tides and how tides affect the earth?

The moon They dont


Does earth orbit causes change in the tides?

Yes, the Earth's orbit around the sun, as well as the moon's orbit around the Earth, influence the gravitational forces that cause the tides. Tides change in intensity and height throughout the month based on the positions of the Earth, moon, and sun.


Why do the tides change in the ocean?

The tides change in the ocean due to the gravitational pull of the moon and the sun on Earth's water. This gravitational force causes the water to bulge, creating high and low tides as the Earth rotates.


How does the moon affect the earth's oceans?

The moons gravitational pull is what causes tides.


What are the effects of high tides and low tides to the fisher folks?

it causes tsunami


What are tides in the science form?

The moon's gravitational pull on the earth is what causes tides.


What does the Moon's gravitational pull do to the tides on earth?

It causes the tides (together with the sun).


What type of tides do Neptune have?

I think it low tides because nothing causes high tides to happen in Neptune


What are and what causes neap tides?

The moon.