Thread: Riding the Tide
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Peter S/Y Anicula
 
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Nav wrote:
The earth-moon body rotates around a common point and water tries to
move away from the centre (water in a bucket swung on a rope

analogy).
The moon exerts gravity which is stronger on the side of the moon.

Thus
water forms two bulges on opposite sides and makes two tides as the
earth rotates...



You make it sound as if the gravitational forces explains the bulge
under the moon and the centrifugal forces explains the bulge on the
side of the earth that turns away from the moon.
That is not right.

The gravitational difference alone can explain that there are bulges
on both side of the earth. That's why it is sometimes the only factor
mentioned when trying to keep the explanation simple.
The centrifugal element can only explain that there is a bulge on the
part of the earth that turns away from the moon.
That is why it is one of the elements (and there are others), that is
sometimes left out of the explanation.

While I think that in some cases it is a good idea to include the
centrifugal element in the explanation, I don't know exactly how many
elements one should include to make it a good explanation - but I
haven't yet seen a complete explanation in a popular publication.

Peter S/Y Anicula





"Nav" skrev i en meddelelse
...
Jeff,

I think the term centrifuigal is appropriate in this context. It is

a
term in the system that can be appreciated without needing to

consider
Newtonian forces. To understand centripetal forces is a lot harder

than
just demonstrating the effect. similarly gravity can be demonstrated
without maths. Thus the explanation becomes really simple e.g.:

The earth-moon body rotates around a common point and water tries to
move away from the center (water in a bucket swung on a rope

analogy).
The moon exerts gravity which is stronger on the side of the moon.

Thus
water forms two bulges on opposite sides and makes two tides as the
earth rotates...


Cheers