|
Registered
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Andover, NY
Posts: 1,350
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by ckissick
As for the size of tides if there were only a sun, it's sort of explained here on a NOAA website:
"First, the tidal force envelope produced by the moon's gravitational attraction is accompanied by a tidal force envelope of considerably smaller amplitude produced by the sun. The tidal force exerted by the sun is a composite of the sun's gravitational attraction and a centrifugal force component created by the revolution of the earth's center-of-mass around the center-of-mass of the earth-sun system, in an exactly analogous manner to the earth-moon relationship. The position of this force envelope shifts with the relative orbital position of the earth in respect to the sun. Because of the great differences between the average distances of the moon (238,855 miles) and sun (92,900,000 miles) from the earth, the tide producing force of the moon is approximately 2.5 times that of the sun."
|
Why did you quote a source that used less precision than me?
__________________
Alexander
'75 911S Targa
'86 951 SOLD
|
11-08-2008, 09:04 AM
|
|