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Chapter 10: Tides

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First Quarter, Last Quarter. Earth, Moon, Sun quadrature. Lower ... One high, one low tide per lunar day. Period of tidal cycle 24 hours 50 minutes. Semidiurnal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 10: Tides


1
Chapter 10 Tides
Fig. 10-6
Fig. 10-7
2
Tide-producing forces
  • Gravity and
  • motions among
  • Earth, Moon,
  • and Sun

Fig. 10-2
3
  • Centripetal force tethers Moon to Earth
  • Directed away from barycenter

Fig. 10-4 a,b
4
Resultant tidal forces
  • Gravitational force, Earth and Moon
  • Centripetal force, Earth and Moon
  • Resultant force moves ocean water horizontally

Fig. 10-6
Fig. 10-7
5
Tidal bulges
  • Two equal and opposite tidal bulges
  • Earth rotates beneath tidal bulges
  • Two high tides
  • Two low tides
  • Per day

Fig. 10-8
6
Complications to simplest equilibrium theory
  • Oceans do not cover entire Earth
  • Oceans do not have uniform depth
  • Friction between ocean and seafloor
  • Continents
  • Moon not always in same place with respect to
    Earth
  • Lunar day longer than solar day

7
Lunar day
  • Moon revolves around Earth
  • Earth has to catch up with Moon to reach same
    position

Fig. 10-9
8
  • Time between successive high tides shifts day
    after day
  • Moon rises later each successive night

9
Solar tidal bulges
  • Tide-producing force of Sun less than half of
    Moons
  • Sun much farther away

10
Month tidal cycle
  • Spring tides
  • New Moon, Full Moon
  • Earth, Moon, Sun syzygy
  • Higher than usual high tides

Fig. 10-12
11
  • Neap tide
  • First Quarter, Last Quarter
  • Earth, Moon, Sun quadrature
  • Lower than usual high tide

Fig. 10-12
12
Declination of Sun and Moon
  • Orientation of Sun, Moon to Earths equator
  • Sun 23.5o N and S, yearly cycle
  • Moon 28.5o N and S, monthly cycle
  • Unequal tides
  • Successive tides different tidal range

13
Unequal tidal range
Fig. 10-15
14
Elliptical orbits
  • Perigee
  • Lunar tidal force greater
  • Higher high tides
  • Apogee
  • Lunar tidal force lesser
  • Lower high tides

Fig. 10-16
15
Dynamic theory of tides
  • Tide shallow-water wave
  • Speed varies with depth
  • Lags behind Earths rotation
  • Rotary flow in open ocean basins
  • Amphidromic point
  • Cotidal lines

16
Rotary flow
  • Crest (high tide) rotates
  • Counterclockwise in Northern Hemisphere
  • Clockwise in Southern Hemisphere

17
Tidal patterns
  • Diurnal
  • One high, one low tide per lunar day
  • Period of tidal cycle 24 hours 50 minutes
  • Semidiurnal
  • Two high, two low tides per lunar day
  • Period 12 hours 25 minutes
  • Equal range

18
  • Mixed
  • Two high, two low tides per lunar day
  • Unequal range
  • Most tides are mixed

19
Standing waves
  • Forced standing wave caused by tides
  • Free-standing waves caused by strong winds or
    seismic disturbances

Fig. 10-22
20
  • Node maximum horizontal flow
  • Antinode maximum vertical flow

Fig. 10-23
21
Bay of Fundy
  • Largest tidal range (spring tide max 17 m)
  • Shape of basin
  • Oscillation period close to tidal period
  • Shoals and narrows to north
  • Basin oriented toward right (Coriolis moves
    water toward right)

Fig. 10-24
22
Tidal bores
  • Wave created by tide rushes upstream
  • Large tidal range
  • Low-lying coastal river
  • Max 8 m high

Fig. 10A
23
End of Chapter 10 Tides
Fig. 10-6
Fig. 10-7
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