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Tides. Tides are generated by:. Gravitational pull of the moon and sun Centripetal force of the rotating Earth. Tides are generated by:. the gravitational pull of the moon and sun - moon has 2x greater gravitational pull than the sun
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Tides are generated by: • Gravitational pull of the moon and sun • Centripetal force of the rotating Earth
Tides are generated by: • the gravitational pull of the moon and sun • - moon has 2x greater gravitational pull than the • sun • - sun is 10 million x more massive than the • moon and is 390 times farther away
GRAVITATIONAL FORCE CENTRIPETAL GRAVITATIONAL & CENTRIPETAL
Tidal Cycles • Diurnal Tide: 24 hr 50 min cycle • Semi DiurnalTide: 12 hr 25 min cycle • Mixed Tide: 12 hr 25 min cycle
Description of tides • High water: a water level maximum ("high tide") • Low water: a water level minimum ("low tide") • Tidal range: the difference between high and low tide • Spring Tide: full moon and new moon (14.77 days) • Neap Tide: 1st quarter and 3rd quarter (14.77 days) Intertidal zone High tide Low tide
The monthly tidal cycle(29½ days) About every 7 days, Earth alternates between: • Spring tide • Alignment of Earth-Moon-Sun system (syzygy) • Lunar and solar bulges constructively interfere • Large tidal range • Neap tide • Earth-Moon-Sun system at right angles (quadrature) • Lunar and solar bulges destructively interfere • Small tidal range
Earth-Moon-Sun positions and the monthly tidal cycle Spring Tide Highest high tide and lowest low tide Neap Tide Moderate tidal range
Tidal Patterns Semidiurnal tides- two high and two low per day; Cape Cod, MA (high latitudes) Diurnal tides- one high and one low per day; Mobile, AL (low latitudes) Mixed pattern tides- Two high and two low tides per day BUT with successive high tide levels that are VERY DIFFERENT from each other; Hawaii (mid latitudes) • Type of tide depends on: • Position on the globe • Water depth • Contour- shape of ocean basins
Bay of Fundy Alma at High Tide Alma at Low Tide
Tidal bore = a true tidal wave • Wall of water that moves upriver • Caused by an incoming high tide • Occurs in some low-lying rivers • Can be large enough to surf or raft
Tidal Information http://life.bio.sunysb.edu/marinebio/mbweb.html HAWAIIAN ISLANDS Mean Spring Mean Tide Station Latitude Longitude Range Range Level Predictions SAND ISLAND, MIDWAY ISLANDS 28° 12.7' 177° 21.6' 0.8 1.2 0.6 Predictions Laysan Island 25° 46' 171° 45' 0.7 1.0 0.4 Predictions East Island, French Frigate Shoals 23° 47' 166° 13' 0.9 1.4 0.6 Predictions Nonopapa, Niihau Island 21° 52' 160° 14' 1.0 1.6 0.7 Predictions Kauai Island Waimea Bay 21° 57' 159° 40' 1.0 1.6 0.7 Predictions Port Allen, Hanapepe Bay 21° 54' 159° 35' 1.1 1.7 0.7 Predictions NAWILIWILI 21° 57.4' 159° 21.6' Predictions Hanamaulu Bay 22° 00' 159° 20' 0.0 1.2 1.8 Predictions Hanalei Bay 22° 13' 159° 30' 1.3 1.8 0.8 Predictions Oahu Island Haleiwa, Waialua Bay 21° 36' 158° 07' - - 1.6 0.7 Predictions Waianae 21° 27' 158° 12' 1.2 1.8 0.8 Predictions HONOLULU 21° 18' 157° 52' 1.3 2.0 0.8 Predictions Hanauma Bay 21° 17' 157° 42' 1.3 1.9 0.8 Predictions Waimanalo 21° 20' 157° 42' 1.1 1.8 0.8 Predictions MOKUOLOE 21° 26.2' 157° 47.6' 1.2 2.0 1.0 Predictions Waikane, Kaneohe Bay 21° 30' 157° 51' 1.4 2.2 1.1 Predictions
Inquiry • Which has the greatest tidal effect– sun or moon? • Where is the greatest tidal range located? • Which lunar phase produces moderate tides? • How is a tidal bore created?