CHAPTER 9 Tides http://www.bbso.njit.edu/espr/sci_images/composite_earth1_red.gif.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Tides Fig Fig
Advertisements

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 9 Tides. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter Overview Tides are the rhythmic rise and fall of sea level. Tides.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 9 Tides. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. What are Tides? Tides – periodic raising and lowering of ocean sea level.
Unit 8 - Tides.
Tides.
 Currents that run along the western coast of the United States are _________________.  Currents that run along the eastern coast of the United States.
Earth Science: 16.2B Tides Tides.
Tides - The Last Wave Information by the University of California (Riverside) updated in 2014.
GEOL 2503 Introduction to Oceanography
TIDES periodic, short term changes in the height of the ocean surface at a particular place.
Essentials of Oceanography 7th Edition
Chapter 10: Tides Fig Fig
TIDES Equilibrium Theory of Tides –Earth-Moon Orbital System –Added Affect of the Sun-Earth Orbital System Dynamic Theory of Tide (add continents) –Amphidromic.
CHAPTER 9 Tides. Overview Rhythmic rise and fall of sea level Rhythmic rise and fall of sea level Very long and regular shallow-water waves Very long.
Chapter 9 Tides.
Tides. Tides are Periodic, short-term changes in height of the sea surface Caused by gravitational forces The longest of all waves Always shallow water.
CHAPTER 9 Tides.
Essentials of Oceanography
TIDES. Tides - periodic rise and fall of sea surface Generated by the gravitational attraction of the Sun and Moon on the oceans moon closer to earth,
Created by Michael Kramer
Ocean Tides Introduction Definition and terms
Tides
TIDES. Tides The periodic short term changes in the height (rise or fall) of the ocean surface at a particular place Caused by a combination of –Distance.
Tides.
Tides
Chapter 11 Tides.
The Tides Chapter 11. Tidal Range Tide Patterns Diurnal tide T = 1 day One high and one low per day.
Moon & Tides By Diana L. Duckworth Rustburg High School Campbell County, VA.
GEOSCI 222/ENVIRON 232 Lecture 16 Tides I
The Tides.
Tides!!!!!!!!!!!. Tides Periodic, short-term changes in ocean height Periodic, short-term changes in ocean height.
The Tides Chapter 11. Tidal Range Tide Patterns Diurnal tide T = 1 day One high and one low per day.
–wave –crest –trough –breaker Objectives Describe the physical properties of waves. Explain how tides form. Compare and contrast various ocean currents.
TIDES Mrs. Walker – Aquatic Science I.tide: the periodic rise and fall (ebb) of ocean water a. tidal day: 24 hours and 50 minutes b. lunar month (tidal.
Tides Tides, or the rising and falling of the sea surface level, have a dominant effect on marine life on nearshore and coastal areas. The two factors.
Tides. Tides are the rhythmic rise and fall of the ocean’s water at a fixed location Tides are extremely large waves –High tide is the crest of the wave.
Tsunami, Seiches, and Tides
Tides Notes. Tide Vocab Tide - Daily rise and fall of sea level along the coast, caused by gravitational attraction of Sun, Moon, and Earth Tide - Daily.
Tides November 18-19, What are Tides? A tide is defined as a periodic rise and fall of the sea surface –very-long period waves noticeable only at.
Tides An ocean tide refers to the cyclic rise and fall of seawater.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. TIDES Chapter 9 Tidal Phenomena.
TIDES Chapter 10. Study Plan Tides are the longest of all Ocean Waves Tides are the longest of all Ocean Waves Tides are forced waves formed.
Tides. Bay of Fundy ► Boats can only travel at higher tides ► Some of the highest tides in the world.
JQ: The Earth has a circumference of about 25,000 miles. If an ocean wave could travel halfway around the Earth in 12 hours, then at what speed would that.
Tides. What causes tides? Tides are created by the imbalance between two forces: 1. Gravitational force of the Moon and Sun on Earth If mass increases.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Tides Chapter 1 Clickers Essentials of Oceanography Eleventh Edition Alan P. Trujillo Harold V. Thurman Chapter 9 Lecture.
Spring & neap tides Tidal range often changes regularly, i.e. every fortnight (14 day period) We see: Spring tides - times of greater tidal range; coincide.
TIDES.
Tides.
CHAPTER 9 Tides Dr. C. Dong, ECC
CHAPTER 9 Tides Tides
CHAPTER 9 Tides.
Waves and Water Dynamics
Chapter 11: Tides Notes: -Field Trip Wednesday -Projects
Tides Periodic rising and falling of ocean waters caused by the gravitational pull of the sun, moon & Earth. Also affected by: Shape and depth of ocean.
Chapter 16.2 Waves and Tides.
Tides Page 46 in Your Notebook.
Tides Tides are daily changes in the elevation of the ocean surface (sea level) Ocean tides result from the gravitational attraction exerted upon Earth.
The regular rising and falling of the sea level on a daily basis
Section 3: Ocean Movements
Chapter 8 Tides.
Tides Gravity- pull or attraction between objects; varies with mass of object Centrifugal force- because the earth and moon are rotating simultaneously.
Tides Tides are long waves that move through the oceans in response to the forces exerted by the moon and sun. Tides originate near the middles of oceans.
Tides.
Tides Periodic rising and falling of ocean waters caused by the gravitational pull of the sun, moon & Earth. Also affected by: Shape and depth of ocean.
The Restless Seas Tides and Waves.
Ocean Waves and Tides.
Tides.
Waves and Tides Earth Science 6th Grade.
Tides Tides are daily changes in the elevation of the ocean surface (sea level) Ocean tides result from the gravitational attraction exerted upon Earth.
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 9 Tides http://www.bbso.njit.edu/espr/sci_images/composite_earth1_red.gif

Overview Rhythmic rise and fall of sea level Very long and regular shallow-water waves Caused by gravitational attraction of Sun, Moon, and Earth http://soconnell.web.wesleyan.edu/ees106/lecture_notes/lecture-tides/HTML%20Presentation%20folder/img064.gif

Tide-generating forces http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/scenario/img008.gif Tide-generating forces Barycenter between Moon and Earth – center of gravity of “Earth-Moon System” Mutual orbit due to gravity and motion Fig. 9.1

Gravitational forces Every particle attracts every other particle Gravitational force proportional to product of masses, toward center of gravity of Moon Inversely proportional to square of separation distance – decrease the farther away from Moon Fig. 9.2

Centripetal force Center-seeking force – force equal at all points Tethers Earth and Moon to each other Fig. 9.3

Tide-producing forces Resultant forces = differences between centripetal and gravitational forces (blue arrows) Near moon, gravitational forces are greater Away from moon, centripetal forces are greater Tide-generating forces are horizontal components resulting in “bulges” Fig. 9.4

Blue arrows are formed from the tip of the red arrows (centripedal forces) to the tip of the black arrows (gravitational forces). Fig. 9.4

Tidal bulges (lunar) Small horizontal forces push seawater into two bulges on opposite sides of Earth One bulge faces Moon Other bulge opposite side Earth Fig. 9.6

http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/scenario/img008.gif Tidal bulges (lunar) Moon closer to Earth so lunar tide-producing force greater than that of Sun Ideal Earth covered by ocean Two tidal bulges Two high tides, 12 hours apart High tide, flood tide, seawater moves on shore Low tide, ebb tide, seawater moves offshore

Lunar Day Moon orbits Earth 24 hours 50 minutes for observer to see subsequent Moons directly overhead High tides are 12 hours and 25 minutes apart Fig. 9.7

Tidal bulges (solar) Similar to lunar bulges but much smaller because Moon is much closer to Earth New/full moon tidal range greatest – spring tide lunar and solar tides in line – constructive interference Time between spring tides about two weeks Quarter moons tidal range least – neap tide lunar and solar tides at 90O – destructive interference

Earth-Moon-Sun positions and spring and neap tides Fig. 9.9

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l37ofe9haMU

Other complicating factors: declination Angular distance Moon or Sun above or below Earth’s equator Sun to Earth: 23.5o N or S of equator Moon to Earth: 28.5o N or S of equator Shifts lunar and solar bulges from equator  unequal tides at given latitude Fig. 9.11 http://www.nos.noaa.gov/education/kits/tides/media/

Declination and tides Unequal tides (unequal tidal ranges at given latitude) Fig. 9.13

Other complicating factors: elliptical orbits Tidal range greatest at perihelion (January) and perigee Tidal range least at aphelion (July) and apogee Moon’s perigee and apogee cycle 27.5 days Omit Fig. 9.12

Idealized tide prediction Two high tides/two low tides per lunar day Six lunar hours between high and low tides http://www.aztecsailing.co.uk/theory/Ch2-Fig-2-tidal-cycle.gif

Real tides affected by many factors http://www.princeton.edu/~pccm/outreach/scsp/water_on_earth/tides/inquiry Earth not covered completely by ocean Continents and friction with seafloor modify tidal bulges Tides are shallow water waves with speed determined by depth of water Tidal bulges cannot form (too slow) Tidal cells “slosh” around amphidromic point http://ffden-2.phys.uaf.edu/645fall2003_web.dir

Tidal cells in world ocean Cotidal lines Tide wave rotates once in 12 hours Counterclockwise in Northern Hemisphere Omit

Omit Fig. 9.14

Tidal patterns Semidiurnal Two high tides/two low tides per day Tidal range about same Diurnal One high tide/one low tide per day Rarest Mixed Tidal range different Most common http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/engineering/hydraulics/images/h25_b6.jpg

Global distribution of tides www.nos.noaa.gov/.../ tides/media/

Tides in coastal waters Standing waves Tide waves reflected by coast Amplification of tidal range Example, Bay of Fundy maximum tidal range 17 m (56 ft) Video http://www.ludssurfingpage.bravepages.com/wswave4.jpg http://academics.sru.edu/GGE/pictures/Newfoundland/Images

Bay of Fundy http://academics.sru.edu/GGE/pictures/Newfoundland/Images http://www.eicc.bio.usyd.edu.au/Newslette www.sfu.ca/ ~dutting/photos.htm http://user.fundy.net/nature/hope.jpg

Tides in coastal waters Tidal bore in low-gradient rivers Video Fig. 9A

Coastal tidal currents Reversing current Flood current or tide – approaching high tide (crest moves into harbor) Ebb current or tide – approaching low tide (trough moves into harbor) Slack tide – period of little current at high or low tide High velocity flow in restricted channels Fig. 9.18

Peak flood and ebb currents in middle of tidal cycle ~1/2 tidal flow moves thru within middle two hours of cycles Example for semidiurnal tide - “rule of 12ths” 1 – 1/12 of volume  slack tide 2 – 2/12 of volume 3 – 3/12 of volume  fastest current 4 – 3/12 of volume  fastest current 5 – 2/12 of volume 6 – 1/12 of volume  slack tide http://www.hka.org.uk/images/rule12.gif

Tidal range is not a good predictor of tidal currents; altered by: Shape and volume of basin Restriction of flow at basin mouth Winds Currents stronger at channel center than at edges http://www.skypic.com/florida

Coastal tidal currents Whirlpool Rapidly spinning seawater Restricted channel connecting two basins with different tidal cycles Fig. 9.19

Tides and marine life Tide pools and life Grunion spawning Fig. 9C http://www.stripersonline.com/surftalk/attachment.php?attachmentid=30481&stc=1&d=1169261518 Tides and marine life Tide pools and life Grunion spawning Fig. 9C

Tide-generated power Renewable resource – mostly hypothetical at this point Does not produce power on demand Possible harmful environmental effects http://www.bluenergy.com/technology.html

End of CHAPTER 9 Tides Fig. 9.21