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				Two High Tides
			 
			Puzzle for you all. The earth spins on it's axis once every 24 hrs and the moon takes 28 days to rotate around the earth - hense the moon is overhead at a different time each day and the times of the tides shift a small amount each day. The ocean tides are said to be caused by the gravitational effect of the moon acting on the earth. If the earth spins only once per day, why are there two high tides each day? 
				__________________ Swapped my WRX Sti MY02 for a Porsche 911SC '83 Keep buying parts to make it look older. Mid life crisis is now in its 12th year. | ||
|  11-06-2008, 11:30 AM | 
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| Bandwidth AbUser Join Date: Nov 2001 Location: SoCal 
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			Plenty to read about the Moon and tides... http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question/astronomy/q0262.shtml   
				__________________ Jim R. Last edited by Jim Richards; 11-06-2008 at 11:59 AM.. Reason: typo | ||
|  11-06-2008, 11:40 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: the beach 
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			I'm a geologist.  I'll take this one. As you know, the gravitational pull between the earth and moon is what causes the tides. Over the billions of years that the earth and moon have been around, a stable "tidal wave" has developed. On the side of earth that faces the moon, you have your highest of the two daily high tides. It seems odd, I know, but there is another, lower, high tide on the side of earth that is facing away from the moon. This is because the "tidal wave" is a normal ocean wave with a wavelength equal to one-half the earth's circumference. It has two peaks and two troughs, and it follows the moon as the moon does its orbit. I suppose you could ask why the wavelength isn't equal to the entire circumference of the earth, with one peak and one trough. I have some ideas, but I'd have to look that one up. In any case, it is the manifestation a true tidal wave. That's why we prefer to cause seismic waves tsunamis instead of tidal waves. Ironically, tsunami is Japanese for tidal wave, or so I hear. 
				__________________ Charlie 1966 912 Polo Red 1950 VW Bug 1983 VW Westfalia; 1989 VW Syncro Tristar Doka | ||
|  11-06-2008, 11:53 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jan 2002 Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea. 
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No, I won't ask. I can see where the reciprocal tide is necessary to keep the planet somewhat in balance. I wouldn't want to live where I live if the thing wobbled. We'd have an earthquake every day.
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|  11-06-2008, 11:56 AM | 
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| Detached Member Join Date: May 2003 Location: southern California 
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			That's easy.  The sun and the moon pull on the Earth as if it were a single point.  The Earth shifts slightly and the water on both sides of the earth sort of bulges out a little.  Hence two tides/day.
		 
				__________________ Hugh | ||
|  11-06-2008, 12:16 PM | 
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| abit off center | 
			I am still trying to figure out if I am right on the equator and flush my toilet which way does the water go?
		 
				__________________ ______________________ Craig G2Performance Twinplug, head work, case savers, rockers arms, etc. | ||
|  11-06-2008, 12:18 PM | 
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| Bandwidth AbUser Join Date: Nov 2001 Location: SoCal 
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			Down, silly.
		 
				__________________ Jim R. | ||
|  11-06-2008, 12:18 PM | 
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			Cuz your mama jumped into the ocean twice.
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|  11-06-2008, 12:21 PM | 
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|  11-06-2008, 12:22 PM | 
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| Run smooth, run fast Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: South Carolina 
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Yup... it goes whatever way the toilet is designed to make it go... most I've seen shoot the water in a clockwise direction. cgarr, the question you're thinking of "is which way does the water in a sink or tub spiral when the plug is removed?"  That does go a different direction depending on whether you're above or below the equator. On the equator, I dunno. 
				__________________ - John "We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline." | ||
|  11-06-2008, 12:34 PM | 
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| abit off center | 
			This is cool, Now I just need to load it up and try it!! 
				__________________ ______________________ Craig G2Performance Twinplug, head work, case savers, rockers arms, etc. | ||
|  11-06-2008, 12:39 PM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Houston TX 
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				 | Quote: 
 The term "tidal" and "tide" come from gravitational tidal forces. Any gravitational source puts several different stresses on any other object...it doesn't just pull it. One of the forces is a squeezing in the transverse direction. Another is a lengthening in the radial direction. These two force together cause the ocean to form an oval (more properly, and ellipse) around the Earth (which is also being squeezed and lengthened into an ellipse, but on a MUCH smaller scale). The math behind it is pretty complex, but the result is well understood. It's not because of an ancient stable tidal wave traveling around the planet. 
				__________________ Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! | ||
|  11-06-2008, 05:39 PM | 
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			I didn't look at the link in the second post, it basically says the same thing, without the big words    
				__________________ Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! | ||
|  11-06-2008, 05:47 PM | 
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| Bandwidth AbUser Join Date: Nov 2001 Location: SoCal 
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			Laplace is laughing...
		 
				__________________ Jim R. | ||
|  11-06-2008, 06:33 PM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: the beach 
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 In any case, this link gives a pretty good explanation of the two tides. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/venice/tides.html 
				__________________ Charlie 1966 912 Polo Red 1950 VW Bug 1983 VW Westfalia; 1989 VW Syncro Tristar Doka | ||
|  11-06-2008, 08:23 PM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: the beach 
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Funny you should mention Laplace.  I used to work on earthquake prediction research in which we used groundwater levels in deeps wells to measure earth strain.  If the strain changed anomalously, the groundwater would rise or fall, and an earthquake would soon follow.  That's the theory, anyway.   Because of earth tides, groundwater rises and falls twice a day as the earth compresses and contracts. To filter out these earth tide effects, we modified the data with a Laplace Transform. 
				__________________ Charlie 1966 912 Polo Red 1950 VW Bug 1983 VW Westfalia; 1989 VW Syncro Tristar Doka | ||
|  11-06-2008, 08:33 PM | 
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|  11-06-2008, 08:42 PM | 
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| Slackerous Maximus Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Columbus, OH 
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			I was SO waiting for a physicist VS. geologist expletive filled pissing contest. Take off the thinking caps and let the hate flow pencil necks.    
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|  11-06-2008, 08:59 PM | 
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| Registered Usurper Join Date: Sep 2005 
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				 | Quote: 
   
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|  11-06-2008, 09:08 PM | 
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| Bandwidth AbUser Join Date: Nov 2001 Location: SoCal 
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			Getting my popcorn...I'll be right back.     
				__________________ Jim R. | ||
|  11-07-2008, 02:34 AM | 
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