Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Nav" wrote Sigh. Look you can say what you like but it is the imbalance of force between the centrifigal and gravitational forces that causes the two tides. That's the explanation that you advocate. That is one out of several explanation models. Now you can a call that "differential gravity" but why? Doesn't that lead to the confusion that is so apparent? You are certainly confused. You don't seem to understand the "Differential model". You claim that it doesn't explain the two bulges when it clearly does. I like the model. For the last time, gravity, as a perectly defined force, only acts toward the center of the system, it cannot _by itself_ produce two tides. If gravity alone could do it why is the rotation of the system important (what happens in free fall?). Have a look at the teaching site I posted for a clear simple explanation. If the moon stopped its rotation around the earth and the earth and the moon was "falling" toward each other, there would still be two bulges. Anyone who claims otherwise clearly haven't understood what is happening. Peter S/Y Anicula |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Riding the Tide | ASA | |||
[ANN] Tide Tool Freeware for Palm OS Updated | General | |||
[ANN] Tide Tool Freeware for Palm OS Updated | Cruising | |||
[ANN] Freeware Tide Program for Palm OS Updated | UK Power Boats |