Title: Tides
1Tides
2Tides are
- Periodic, short-term changes in height of the sea
surface - Caused by gravitational forces
- The longest of all waves
- Always shallow water waves
- Forced waves never free of the forces that cause
them
3The Basic Physics of Tides
- Tides result from the COMBINED gravitational
effects of the moon and sun acting on the earth - Tidal force is
- Proportional to mass of earth, moon sun
- Inversely proportional to distance CUBED
4The Basic Physics of Tides
- Mass of the sun 27x106 moons
- Sun is 387 times farther away from earth
- Which exerts a stronger tidal force?
- R3 for the sun is 58x106
- The suns influence on the tides is 46 of the
moon
5The Equilibrium Theory of Tides
- Developed by Issac Newton (17th Century)
- Describes first-order (most important) factors
influencing tides - Assumes
- Ocean depth is constant
- Ocean surface conforms instantaneously
- No continents
- All forces in equilibrium
6The moon and tractive forces
- Planetary motion is governed by the balance
between gravitational and inertial forces - What is inertia?
- tendancy for an object to move in a straight line
- Sometimes incorrectly called centrifugal force
7Motion due to inertia
8Motion due to gravity
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10Earth and moon revolve about the SYSTEMs center
of gravity
The moon does NOT revolve around the earths
center of gravity
11The moons gravity attracts the ocean surface
toward the moon
12Inertia causes ocean on opposite side of the
earth to bulge outward
13Results in two high spots and two low spots
14A diagram of the force balance
15The earths rotation produces the rhythmic rise
and fall of the tides
16If tides simply result from the balance of
inertia and gravity, why are they so complicated?
The Equilibrium Theory ignores some important
factors
17- Complication The tidal day (time required for
the earth-moon system to complete a single
rotation) is 24 h 50 mi
The tide arrives 50 minutes later each day
18Complication The moon changes position relative
to the equator
28.5 N in winter, 28.5 S in summer
19Complication The sun also causes the tides to
bulge
Alignment of the sun and moon cause very high
(spring) tides. Spring tides occur every 2 weeks,
not just in the spring.
20ComplicationThe sun also causes the tides to
bulge
Opposition of sun and moon cancel gravitational
pull. Produce low (neap) tides every two weeks.
21Complication Orbits of earth and moon are
elliptical
r
- Distance (r) is not constant, T a 1/r3
- Apogee point where lunar r is greatest
- Perigee point where lunar r is smallest
- Aphelion point where solar distance is greatest
- Perihelion point where solar distance is
smallest
22More complications
- Depth of the ocean is not constant
- Ocean basins
- Submerged mountain ridges
- Island arcs and trenches
- Continental shelves
- Continents
- Bays, inlets, river mouths, etc.
23- Newton knew his model (first proposed in 1687)
was incomplete - His theory predicted the maximum tidal range to
be 79 cm (55 for moon, 24 for sun) - Global average tide is 2 m
- But he wasnt primarily an oceanographer, and
went on to solve problems that were more
important (at least to him) - The Dynamic Theory of Tides deals with these
complications - First developed by Laplace in 1775
- Subsequent refinements
- Improved prediction accuracy
- Increased model complexity
24Examples of tidal complexity
253 Classes of Tidal Patterns
26Tidal patterns are determined by GEOGRAPHY
27- Tidal waves in the North Pacific Basin
- slosh back and forth within basins like seiches
- But feel the Coriolis effect, causing water to
move to the right - Reflects off N. America,
- Water moves to the left in the S. Hemisphere
- Rotate in a counterclockwise direction around
AMPHIDROMIC POINTS
28Tidal waves circulate around Nodes called
Amphidromic Points
29The node of a seiche is the point where sea level
does not change
- Shallow-water wave
- Rocking of water confined to a small space
- Specific resonant frequency that changes with
- the amount of water or
- the size shape of the container
- A form of standing wave
- Node is the point of no vertical movement
30Amphidromic Circulation Develops Around Nodes
called Amphidromic Points
setting up a counterclockwise progression
Wave reflects off N. America,
Coriolis effect turns it to the right
Tidal wave enters N. Pacific Basin
31Geography controls the location of Amphidromic
points
32- The surface of the ocean is in constant motion
(except at amphidromic points, APs) - So, how do we define the height of the tide?
- APs represent the point of no tidal change, but
height is affected by ocean gyres (why?), storms,
etc. - APs are often far out at sea difficult to survey
actual height
33Tidal Datum
- Defined as the zero point on nautical charts,
tide tables, etc. - Reference point (datum) can be different in
different locations - Rarely defined as the mean sea level
- Defined as mean lower low water (MLLW) on coasts
with mixed tides - Defined as the average of all low tides (mean low
water or MLW) on coasts with diurnal or
semidiurnal tides
34In confined basins (e.g. bays)
- Tides can form bores
- A steep wave moving rapidly upstream
- Speeds exceed theoretical shallow water speed
- How is that possible?
- Tides are FORCED, not free waves
- Basin is often too narrow for formation of
amphidromic point - Tidal wave sloshes in and out
35Both amplitude and speed of tidal waves are
exaggerated by bores
36Tides affect marine organisms
- Zonation on rocky shores, estuaries and sandy
beaches
37Tides affect marine organisms
- Grunion (Leuresthes spp.) spawn on the beach at
low tide - At night in California
- During the daytime in the Sea of Cortez
38Tides are a potential source of power
- Turbines convert water flow to electricity
- A form of hydropower
- Could provide 1 2 of global energy need
- Potential problems
- Fouling maintenance
- Flow restriction stagnation
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