Information about Tidal Force
Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 after breaking up under the influence of Jupiter's tidal forces.
The tidal force is a secondary effect of the force of gravity and is responsible for the tides. It arises because the gravitational field is not constant across a body's diameter.
Explanation
When a body (body 1) is acted on by the gravity of another body (body 2), the field can vary significantly on body 1 between the side of the body facing body 2 and the side facing away from body 2. This causes strains on both bodies and may distort them or even, in extreme cases, break one or the other apart. These strains would not occur if the gravitational field is uniform, since a uniform field only causes the entire body to accelerate together in the same direction and at the same rate.
Saturn's rings are inside the orbits of its moons. Tidal forces prevented the material in the rings from coalescing gravitationally to form moons.
Effects of tidal forces
In the case of an elastic sphere, the effect of a tidal force is to distort the shape of the body without any change in volume. The sphere becomes an ellipsoid, with two bulges, pointing towards and away from the other body. This is essentially what happens to the Earth's oceans. Although the Earth is not falling along a line directly toward the moon, the Earth is continuously accelerating due to the moon's gravitational forces, causing it to wobble around their common center of mass. All parts of the Earth accelerate in response to the moon's gravitational forces, but to an observer on the Earth, it appears that the Earth's center remains at rest, while water in the oceans is redistributed to form bulges on the sides near the moon and far from the moon.When a body rotates while subject to tidal forces, internal friction results in the gradual dissipation of its rotational kinetic energy as heat. If the body is close enough to its primary, this can result in a rotation which is tidally locked to the orbital motion, as in the case of the Earth's moon. Tidal heating produces dramatic volcanic effects on Jupiter's moon Io.
Tidal forces contribute to ocean currents, which moderate global temperatures by transporting heat energy toward the poles. It has been suggested that in addition to variations of insolation associated with orbital forcing, harmonic beat variations in tidal forcing may contribute to climate changes.[1]
Tidal effects become particularly pronounced near small bodies of high mass, such as neutron stars or black holes, where they are responsible for the "spaghettification" of infalling matter. Tidal forces create the oceanic tide of Earth's oceans, where the attracting bodies are the Moon and the Sun.
Tidal forces are also responsible for tidal locking and tidal acceleration.
Mathematical treatment
For a given (externally generated) gravitational field, the tidal acceleration at a point with respect to a body is obtained by vectorially subtracting the gravitational acceleration at the center of the body from the actual gravitational acceleration at the point. Correspondingly, the term tidal force is used to describe the forces due to tidal acceleration. Note that for these purposes the only gravitational field considered is the external one; the gravitational field of the body (as shown in the graphic) is not relevant.Graphic of tidal forces; the gravity field is generated by a body to the right. The top picture shows the gravitational forces; the bottom shows their residual once the field at the centre of the sphere is subtracted; this is the tidal force. See calculated tidal forces for a more exact version
Tidal acceleration does not require rotation or orbiting bodies; e.g. the body may be freefalling in a straight line under the influence of a gravitational field while still being influenced by (changing) tidal acceleration.
Newton's law of universal gravitation states that a particle of mass m a distance r from the center of a sphere of mass M feels a force of:
,
where
is a unit vector pointing from the body M to the particle m.
Extending the description of m to a small body with spatial extent, suppose that R is the inter-object distance -- the distance from the center of M to the center of m, and let ∆r be the radius of m in the direction pointing towards M. Hence the points on the surface of m are located at distance
from the centre of M. Using the above equation, and ignoring the small contribution due to m's own mass, we have the gravitational force at these points as:
Pulling out the R² term from the denominator gives:
The Maclaurin series of 1/(1 + x)² is 1 - 2 x + 3 x² - ..., which gives a series expansion of:
The first term is the traditional gravitational force; all other terms are tidal force terms. Generally, the first is much more significant than the other terms, giving:
The tidal forces can also be calculated away from the axis connecting the bodies, requiring a vector calculation of forces. In the plane perpendicular to the axis, the tidal force is directed inwards, and its magnitude is
in linear approximation as above (1).
See also
References
External links
In physics, force is an action or agency that causes a body of mass m to accelerate. It may be experienced as a lift, a push, or a pull. The acceleration of the body is proportional to the vector sum of all forces acting on it (known as net force or resultant force).
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Gravitation is a natural phenomenon by which all objects with mass attract each other. In everyday life, gravitation is most familiar as the agency that endows objects with weight.
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Tides are the cyclic rising and falling of Earth's ocean surface caused by the tidal forces of the Moon and the Sun acting on the oceans. More generally, tidal phenomena can occur in any object that is subjected to a gravitational field that varies in time and space, such as the
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A gravitational field is a model used within physics to explain how gravity exists in the universe. In its original concept, gravity was a force between point masses. Following Newton, Laplace attempted to model gravity as some kind of radiation field or fluid, and since the 19th
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field is an assignment of a physical quantity to every point in space (or, more generally, spacetime). A field is thus viewed as extending throughout a large region of space so that its influence is all-pervading. The strength of a field usually varies over a region.
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SL9 (Shoemaker-Levy)
Discovery
Discovered by: Carolyn and Eugene M. Shoemaker and David Levy
Discovery date: March 24, 1993
Orbital characteristics A
Inclination: 94.
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Discovery
Discovered by: Carolyn and Eugene M. Shoemaker and David Levy
Discovery date: March 24, 1993
Orbital characteristics A
Inclination: 94.
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Jupiter
This processed color image of Jupiter was produced in 1990 by the U.S. Geological Survey from a Voyager image captured in 1979. The colors have been enhanced to bring out detail.
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This processed color image of Jupiter was produced in 1990 by the U.S. Geological Survey from a Voyager image captured in 1979. The colors have been enhanced to bring out detail.
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ellipsoid is a type of quadric surface that is a higher dimensional analogue of an ellipse. The equation of a standard ellipsoid body in an x-y-z Cartesian coordinate system is
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A bulge is something which sticks out from a surface.
Bulge may also refer to:
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Bulge may also refer to:
- A localized discontinuity in an extended military line
- The Battle of the Bulge, a major World War II battle
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center of mass of a system of particles is a specific point at which, for many purposes, the system's mass behaves as if it were concentrated. The center of mass is a function only of the positions and masses of the particles that comprise the system.
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Io
Click image for description
Discovery
Discovered by: Galileo Galilei
Discovery date: January 7, 1610
Orbital characteristics
Periapsis: 420,000 km (0.002807 AU)
Apoapsis: 423,400 km (0.
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Click image for description
Discovery
Discovered by: Galileo Galilei
Discovery date: January 7, 1610
Orbital characteristics
Periapsis: 420,000 km (0.002807 AU)
Apoapsis: 423,400 km (0.
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Insolation (from INcoming SOLar radiATION) is a measure of solar energy received on a given surface area in a given time. It is commonly expressed in kilowatt-hours per square meter per day (kW•h/m²/day).
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Orbital forcing describes the effect on climate of slow changes in the tilt of the Earth's axis and shape of the orbit (see Milankovitch cycles). These orbital changes change the total amount of sunlight reaching the Earth by up to 25% at mid-latitudes (from 400 to 500 Wm
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In acoustics, a beat is an interference between two sounds of slightly different frequencies, perceived as periodic variations in volume whose rate is the difference between the two frequencies.
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129: 312.
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black hole is a region of space in which the gravitational field is so powerful that nothing can escape after having fallen past the event horizon. The name comes from the fact that even electromagnetic radiation (e.g. light) is unable to escape, rendering the interior invisible.
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spaghettification is the stretching of objects into long thin shapes (rather like spaghetti) in a very strong gravity field, and is caused by extreme tidal forces. In the most extreme cases, near black holes, the stretching is so powerful that no object can withstand it, no matter
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Tides are the cyclic rising and falling of Earth's ocean surface caused by the tidal forces of the Moon and the Sun acting on the oceans. More generally, tidal phenomena can occur in any object that is subjected to a gravitational field that varies in time and space, such as the
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EARTH was a short-lived Japanese vocal trio which released 6 singles and 1 album between 2000 and 2001. Their greatest hit, their debut single "time after time", peaked at #13 in the Oricon singles chart.
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Moon
The Moon as seen by an observer on Earth
Orbital characteristics
Periapsis: 363,104 km
0.0024 AU
Apoapsis: 405,696 km
0.0027 AU
Semi-major axis: 384,399 km
0.
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The Moon as seen by an observer on Earth
Orbital characteristics
Periapsis: 363,104 km
0.0024 AU
Apoapsis: 405,696 km
0.0027 AU
Semi-major axis: 384,399 km
0.
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The Sun
Observation data
Mean distance
from Earth 1.4961011 m
(8.31 min at light speed)
Visual brightness (V) −26.74m [1]
Absolute magnitude 4.
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Observation data
Mean distance
from Earth 1.4961011 m
(8.31 min at light speed)
Visual brightness (V) −26.74m [1]
Absolute magnitude 4.
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Tidal locking makes one side of an astronomical body always face another; for example, one side of the Earth's Moon always faces the Earth. A tidally locked body takes just as long to rotate around its own axis as it does to revolve around its partner.
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Tidal acceleration is an effect of the tidal forces between an orbiting natural satellite (i.e. a moon), and the planet (called the primary) that it orbits.
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Free fall is motion with no acceleration other than that provided by gravity. This also applies to objects in orbit, even though these objects are not "falling" in the usual sense of the word.
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Isaac Newton's theory of universal gravitation is a physical law describing the gravitational attraction between massive bodies. It is a part of classical mechanics and was first formulated in Newton's work Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, published in 1687.
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prevew not available
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In oceanography, tidal resonance occurs when the time it takes for a large wave to travel from the mouth of the bay to the opposite end, then reflect and travel back to the mouth of the bay, coincidentally matches the time from one high tide to the next.
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The Roche limit, sometimes referred to as the Roche radius, is the distance within which a celestial body, held together only by its own gravity, will disintegrate due to a second celestial body's tidal forces exceeding the first body's gravitational self-attraction.
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