Tides

23
Chapter 10: Tides Fig. 10-7 Fig. 10-6

Transcript of Tides

Page 1: Tides

Chapter 10: Tides

Fig. 10-7

Fig. 10-6

Page 2: Tides

Tide-producing forces

Gravity and motions among Earth, Moon, and Sun

Fig. 10-2

Page 3: Tides

Centripetal force “tethers” Moon to Earth Directed away

from barycenter Click for ‘Kiddie’

version of tidesFig. 10-4 a,b

Page 4: Tides

Resultant tidal forces

Gravitational force, Earth and Moon

Centripetal force, Earth and Moon

Resultant force moves ocean water horizontallyFig. 10-7

Fig. 10-6

Page 5: Tides

Tidal bulges Two equal and

opposite tidal bulges

Earth rotates beneath tidal bulges

Two high tides Two low tides Per day Click on picture Fig. 10-8

Page 6: Tides

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

Page 7: Tides

Lunar day Moon revolves around Earth Earth has to “catch up” with Moon

to reach same position

Fig. 10-9

Page 8: Tides

Time between successive high tides shifts day after day

Moon rises later each successive night

Page 9: Tides

Solar tidal bulges

Tide-producing force of Sun less than half of Moon’s

Sun much farther away

Page 10: Tides

Month tidal cycle Spring tides

New Moon, Full Moon

Earth, Moon, Sun syzygy

Higher than usual high tides Fig. 10-12

Page 11: Tides

Neap tide First Quarter,

Last Quarter Earth, Moon,

Sun quadrature

Lower than usual high tide

Fig. 10-12

Page 12: Tides

Declination of Sun and Moon

Orientation of Sun, Moon to Earth’s equator Sun 23.5o N and S, yearly cycle Moon 28.5o N and S, monthly

cycle Unequal tides

Successive tides different tidal range

Page 13: Tides

Unequal tidal range

Fig. 10-15

Page 14: Tides

Elliptical orbits Click picture for

Moon phases Perigee

Lunar tidal force greater

Higher high tides Apogee

Lunar tidal force lesser

Lower high tidesFig. 10-16

Page 15: Tides

Dynamic theory of tides

Tide shallow-water wave Speed varies with depth Lags behind Earth’s rotation

Rotary flow in open ocean basins Amphidromic point Cotidal lines

Page 16: Tides

Rotary flow

Crest (high tide) rotates Counterclockwise in

Northern Hemisphere Clockwise in Southern

Hemisphere

Page 17: Tides

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

Page 18: Tides

Mixed Two high, two low tides per lunar day

Unequal range Most tides are mixed

Page 19: Tides

Standing waves

Forced standing wave caused by tides

Free-standing waves caused by strong winds or seismic disturbances Fig. 10-22

Page 20: Tides

Node maximum horizontal flow

Antinode maximum vertical flow

Fig. 10-23

Page 21: Tides

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)

Click picture to see

Fig. 10-24

Page 22: Tides

Tidal bores

Wave created by tide rushes upstream

Large tidal range Low-lying coastal

river Max 8 m high Click picture to

see a tidal bore.Fig. 10A

Page 23: Tides

End of Chapter 10: Tides

Fig. 10-7

Fig. 10-6