A high tide.
Yes. High tides happen on the point on earth closest to the moon, and the opposite side of the earth.
The Proxigean Spring Tide is a rare, unusually high tide. This very high tide occurs when the moon is both unusually close to the Earth (at its closest perigee, called the proxigee) and in the New Moon phase (when the Moon is between the Sun and the Earth). The proxigean spring tide occurs at most once every 1.5 years.
Well if you think about the moon's gravity pulls the water to create tide, then the gravity would be strongest closer to the moon, so then whatever part of the Earth if closest to the moon a high tide will be experienced as will the part of the earth opposite.
It is a tide which occurs 3 or 4 times a year when the Moon's perigee (its closest point to Earth during its 28-day elliptical orbit) coincides with a spring tide (when the
A king tide occurs when the gravitational forces of the sun, moon, and Earth align, causing higher-than-normal tides. This phenomenon happens a few times a year when the moon is closest to the Earth in its orbit.
No
A perigean spring tide is when the Moon is closest to the Earth during the spring tide.
AP
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The relative position of a spring tide is when the moon new or full is closest yo the earth.
Yes. High tides happen on the point on earth closest to the moon, and the opposite side of the earth.
the gravitational force of the moon is pulling on all mass of the earth, so the water and cause the earth is orbitting it creates tide. high tide on the side closest to the moon. and low tide on the other side
The Proxigean Spring Tide is a rare, unusually high tide. This very high tide occurs when the moon is both unusually close to the Earth (at its closest perigee, called the proxigee) and in the New Moon phase (when the Moon is between the Sun and the Earth). The proxigean spring tide occurs at most once every 1.5 years.
Well if you think about the moon's gravity pulls the water to create tide, then the gravity would be strongest closer to the moon, so then whatever part of the Earth if closest to the moon a high tide will be experienced as will the part of the earth opposite.
Well if you think about the moon's gravity pulls the water to create tide, then the gravity would be strongest closer to the moon, so then whatever part of the Earth if closest to the moon a high tide will be experienced as will the part of the earth opposite.
It is a tide which occurs 3 or 4 times a year when the Moon's perigee (its closest point to Earth during its 28-day elliptical orbit) coincides with a spring tide (when the
A king tide occurs when the gravitational forces of the sun, moon, and Earth align, causing higher-than-normal tides. This phenomenon happens a few times a year when the moon is closest to the Earth in its orbit.