Title: CHAPTER 9 Tides
1CHAPTER 9Tides
2Overview
- Rhythmic rise and fall of sea level
- Very long and regular shallow-water waves
- Caused by gravitational attraction of Sun, Moon,
and Earth
3Weight
- A measure of the pull of gravity
4Gravity
- The force of attraction between two objects.
- The amount of force is determined by
- 1. The mass of the objects. The more massive
the object the greater the force. - 2. The distance between the objects. The
greater the distance the less the force.
5Gravity Earth, Sun, Moon
- Which is more massive?
- Sun
- Which is closer to the Earth?
- Moon
- Which has the greater gravitational effect on the
earth? - Moon
6Assumptions
- The Earth is smooth (like a ball) no
continents. - Water uniformly covers the Earth.
7Gravitational forces
- Every particle attracts every other particle
- Gravitational force proportional to product of
masses - Inversely proportional to square of separation
distance
Fig. 9.2
8Earths Tidal Bulge
The Moons gravity pulls the water out to one
side.
9Centrifugal Force
- Centrifugal force is a force outward from the
center of rotation
10Center of Mutual Orbit
- If two objects have the same mass they will orbit
about a point half way between them.
This point is called the Center of Mass Center
of Gravity or Barycenter
11Earths Barycenter
- The Earth/Moon center of orbit is a point inside
the surface of the Earth. But not the center of
the Earth. - It is the point of mutual orbit due to gravity
and motion.
12Earth/Moon Motion
- This is what the Earth/Moon orbit looks like.
- Notice how the Earth Wobbles.
13Equilibrium Bulge
- The equilibrium bulge on the opposite side of
the Earth from the Moon is caused by centrifugal
force from the Earths Wobble.
14The Tide is a Wave
- The tide is a wave and it has two crests and two
troughs. - The crest is high tide and the trough is low tide.
Trough
Low Tide
High Tide
High Tide
Crest
Crest
Trough
Low Tide
15Tidal bulges (lunar)
- Small horizontal forces push seawater into two
bulges - Opposite sides of Earth
- One bulge faces Moon
- Other bulge opposite side Earth
Fig. 9.6
16Tidal Day (Lunar Day)
It take 24 hours for the Earth to make one
rotation. But the Moon has moved. It takes an
additional 50 minutes to get back to the Moon
17Lunar Day
- Moon orbits Earth
- 24 hours 50 minutes for observer to see
subsequent Moons directly overhead - High tides are 12 hours and 25 minutes apart
Fig. 9.7
18Tidal bulges (lunar)
Moon closer to Earth so lunar tide-producing
force greater than that of Sun
Tidal bulges (solar)
Similar to lunar bulges but much smaller Moon
closer to Earth
19Spring Tide
Sun Moon Pull Together New Full Moon
Greatest tidal range (Distance from high to low
tide) Highest High Tide Lowest Low Tide Time
between spring tides about two weeks
20Neap Tide
Sun Moon Pull At 90o Quarter Moons
Least tidal range (Distance from High to Low
tide) Lowest High Tide Highest Low Tide
21Idealized tide prediction
- Two high tides/two low tides per lunar day
- Six lunar hours between high and low tides
22Complicating factors Declination
- Angular distance of the Moon or Sun above or
below Earths equator - Sun to Earth 23.5o N or S of equator
- Moon to Earth 28.5o N or S of equator
- Shifts lunar and
- solar bulges away
from the equator - Unequal tides
Fig. 9.11
23Declination and tides
- Unequal tides (unequal tidal ranges)
Fig. 9.13
24Complicating factors Elliptical Orbits
- Tidal range greatest at perihelion (January) and
perigee - Tidal range least at aphelion (July) and apogee
- Perigee and apogee cycle 27.5 days
Fig. 9.12
25Real tides
- Earth not covered completely by ocean
- Continents and friction with seafloor modify
tidal bulges - Tides are shallow water waves with speed
determined by depth of water - Tidal bulges cannot form (too slow)
- Tidal cells rotate around amphidromic point
26Tidal cells in world ocean
- Cotidal lines
- Tide wave rotates once in 12 hours
- Counterclockwise in Northern Hemisphere
27Fig. 9.14
28Tidal patterns
- Diurnal Gulf Coast
- One high tide/one low tide per day
- Semidiurnal East Coast (Virginia Beach)
- Two high tides/two low tides per day
- Tidal range about same (same height)
- Mixed - West Coast
- Two high tides/two low tides per day
- Tidal range different (not same height)
- Most common
29(No Transcript)
30Tides in coastal waters
- Standing waves
- Tide waves reflected by coast
- Amplification of tidal range
- Example, Bay of Fundy maximum tidal range 17 m
(56 ft)
31Tides in coastal waters
- Tidal bore in low-gradient rivers
Fig. 9A
32Tidal Bore
- Surfing
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v4ZuZiLuHM1A
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmrNcZUrgCrM
- http//video.google.com/videoplay?docid7138096226
42491779ei92-iS7PrFpKBlgeKkfSODQqtidalborevi
deohlen - Wave
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vghBPn3UDt9ghttp//w
ww.youtube.com/watch?vghBPn3UDt9g - http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1HMCK6wPg8E
33Coastal Tidal Currents
- Reversing current
- High tide, Flood tide, Flood current seawater
moves on shore - Low tide, Ebb tide, Ebb current seawater moves
offshore - High velocity flow in restricted channels
34Coastal tidal currents
- Whirlpool
- Rapidly spinning seawater
- Restricted channel connecting two basins with
different tidal cycles
Fig. 9.19
35Tides and marine life
- Tide pools and life
- Grunion spawning
Fig. 9C
36Tide-generated power
- Renewable resource
- Does not produce power on demand
- Possible harmful environmental effects
- Most devices use tidal currents
37End of CHAPTER 9 Tides