| Ocean tides vary during the Lunar month according
to the combined influences of the Sun and Moon. In this animation
the viewpoint is fixed relative to the Earth, and so the Sun
and Moon appear to orbit clockwise. The Sun is much more massive
than the Moon, but is also much further away. Thus, its gravitational
pull (yellow arrow) is only about half that of the Moon (gray
arrow).
Note the new moon (top, right) and spring tide (left) at the
start of the month. As the month proceeds, the Sun's apparent
motion is faster than the Moon's. Thus the Moon's gravitational
pull lags behind that of the Sun, leading to a neap tide after
7 days. On day 14, the Moon is opposite the Sun, resulting in
a full moon.
by Declan DePaor
>>see: p.414 |
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