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Theory of tides

The theory of tides is the application of continuum mechanics to interpret and predict the tidal deformations of planetary and satellite bodies and their atmospheres and oceans (especially Earth's oceans) under the gravitational loading of another astronomical body or bodies (especially the Moon and Sun).

High and low tide in the Bay of Fundy

History edit

Australian Aboriginal astronomy edit

The Yolngu people of northeastern Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory of Australia identified a link between the Moon and the tides, which they mythically attributed to the Moon filling with water and emptying out again.[1][2]

Classical era edit

The tides received relatively little attention in the civilizations around the Mediterranean Sea, as the tides there are relatively small, and the areas that experience tides do so unreliably.[3][4][5] A number of theories were advanced, however, from comparing the movements to breathing or blood flow to theories involving whirlpools or river cycles.[4] A similar "breathing earth" idea was considered by some Asian thinkers.[6] Plato reportedly believed that the tides were caused by water flowing in and out of undersea caverns.[3] Crates of Mallus attributed the tides to "the counter-movement (ἀντισπασμός) of the sea” and Apollodorus of Corcyra to "the refluxes from the Ocean".[7] An ancient Indian Purana text dated to 400-300 BC refers to the ocean rising and falling because of heat expansion from the light of the Moon.[a][8]

Ultimately the link between the Moon (and Sun) and the tides became known to the Greeks, although the exact date of discovery is unclear; references to it are made in sources such as Pytheas of Massilia in 325 BC and Pliny the Elder's Natural History in 77 AD. Although the schedule of the tides and the link to lunar and solar movements was known, the exact mechanism that connected them was unclear.[4] Classicists Thomas Little Heath claimed that both Pytheas and Posidonius connected the tides with the moon, "the former directly, the latter through the setting up of winds".[7] Seneca mentions in De Providentia the periodic motion of the tides controlled by the lunar sphere.[9] Eratosthenes (3rd century BC) and Posidonius (1st century BC) both produced detailed descriptions of the tides and their relationship to the phases of the Moon, Posidonius in particular making lengthy observations of the sea on the Spanish coast, although little of their work survived. The influence of the Moon on tides was mentioned in Ptolemy's Tetrabiblos as evidence of the reality of astrology.[3][10] Seleucus of Seleucia is thought to have theorized around 150 BC that tides were caused by the Moon as part of his heliocentric model.[11][12]

Aristotle, judging from discussions of his beliefs in other sources, is thought to have believed the tides were caused by winds driven by the Sun's heat, and he rejected the theory that the Moon caused the tides. An apocryphal legend claims that he committed suicide in frustration with his failure to fully understand the tides.[3] Heraclides also held "the sun sets up winds, and that these winds, when they blow, cause the high tide and, when they cease, the low tide".[7] Dicaearchus also "put the tides down to the direct action of the sun according to its position".[7] Philostratus discusses tides in Book Five of Life of Apollonius of Tyana (circa 217-238 AD); he was vaguely aware of a correlation of the tides with the phases of the Moon but attributed them to spirits moving water in and out of caverns, which he connected with the legend that spirits of the dead cannot move on at certain phases of the Moon.[b]

Medieval period edit

The Venerable Bede discusses the tides in The Reckoning of Time and shows that the twice-daily timing of tides is related to the Moon and that the lunar monthly cycle of spring and neap tides is also related to the Moon's position. He goes on to note that the times of tides vary along the same coast and that the water movements cause low tide at one place when there is high tide elsewhere.[13] However, he made no progress regarding the question of how exactly the Moon created the tides.[4]

Medieval rule-of-thumb methods for predicting tides were said to allow one "to know what Moon makes high water" from the Moon's movements.[14] Dante references the Moon's influence on the tides in his Divine Comedy.[15][3]

Medieval European understanding of the tides was often based on works of Muslim astronomers, which became available through Latin translation starting from the 12th century.[16] Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi, in his Introductorium in astronomiam, taught that ebb and flood tides were caused by the Moon.[16] Abu Ma'shar discussed the effects of wind and Moon's phases relative to the Sun on the tides.[16] In the 12th century, al-Bitruji contributed the notion that the tides were caused by the general circulation of the heavens.[16] Medieval Arabic astrologers frequently referenced the Moon's influence on the tides as evidence for the reality of astrology; some of their treatises on the topic influenced western Europe.[10][3] Some theorized that the influence was caused by lunar rays heating the ocean's floor.[5]

Modern era edit

Simon Stevin in his 1608 De spiegheling der Ebbenvloet (The Theory of Ebb and Flood) dismisses a large number of misconceptions that still existed about ebb and flood. Stevin pleads for the idea that the attraction of the Moon was responsible for the tides and writes in clear terms about ebb, flood, spring tide and neap tide, stressing that further research needed to be made.[17][18] In 1609, Johannes Kepler correctly suggested that the gravitation of the Moon causes the tides,[c] which he compared to magnetic attraction[20][4][21][22] basing his argument upon ancient observations and correlations.

In 1616, Galileo Galilei wrote Discourse on the Tides.[23] He strongly and mockingly rejects the lunar theory of the tides,[21][4] and tries to explain the tides as the result of the Earth's rotation and revolution around the Sun, believing that the oceans moved like water in a large basin: as the basin moves, so does the water.[24] Therefore, as the Earth revolves, the force of the Earth's rotation causes the oceans to "alternately accelerate and retardate".[25] His view on the oscillation and "alternately accelerated and retardated" motion of the Earth's rotation is a "dynamic process" that deviated from the previous dogma, which proposed "a process of expansion and contraction of seawater."[26] However, Galileo's theory was erroneous.[23] In subsequent centuries, further analysis led to the current tidal physics. Galileo tried to use his tidal theory to prove the movement of the Earth around the Sun. Galileo theorized that because of the Earth's motion, borders of the oceans like the Atlantic and Pacific would show one high tide and one low tide per day. The Mediterranean Sea had two high tides and low tides, though Galileo argued that this was a product of secondary effects and that his theory would hold in the Atlantic. However, Galileo's contemporaries noted that the Atlantic also had two high tides and low tides per day, which led to Galileo omitting this claim from his 1632 Dialogue.[27]

René Descartes theorized that the tides (alongside the movement of planets, etc.) were caused by aetheric vortices, without reference to Kepler's theories of gravitation by mutual attraction; this was extremely influential, with numerous followers of Descartes expounding on this theory throughout the 17th century, particularly in France.[28] However, Descartes and his followers acknowledged the influence of the Moon, speculating that pressure waves from the Moon via the aether were responsible for the correlation.[5][29][6][30]

 
Newton's three-body model

Newton, in the Principia, provides a correct explanation for the tidal force, which can be used to explain tides on a planet covered by a uniform ocean but which takes no account of the distribution of the continents or ocean bathymetry.[31]

Dynamic theory edit

While Newton explained the tides by describing the tide-generating forces and Daniel Bernoulli gave a description of the static reaction of the waters on Earth to the tidal potential, the dynamic theory of tides, developed by Pierre-Simon Laplace in 1775,[32] describes the ocean's real reaction to tidal forces.[33] Laplace's theory of ocean tides takes into account friction, resonance and natural periods of ocean basins. It predicts the large amphidromic systems in the world's ocean basins and explains the oceanic tides that are actually observed.[34]

The equilibrium theory—based on the gravitational gradient from the Sun and Moon but ignoring the Earth's rotation, the effects of continents, and other important effects—could not explain the real ocean tides.[35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42] Since measurements have confirmed the dynamic theory, many things have possible explanations now, like how the tides interact with deep sea ridges, and chains of seamounts give rise to deep eddies that transport nutrients from the deep to the surface.[43] The equilibrium tide theory calculates the height of the tide wave of less than half a meter, while the dynamic theory explains why tides are up to 15 meters.[44]

Satellite observations confirm the accuracy of the dynamic theory, and the tides worldwide are now measured to within a few centimeters.[45][46] Measurements from the CHAMP satellite closely match the models based on the TOPEX data.[47][48][49] Accurate models of tides worldwide are essential for research since the variations due to tides must be removed from measurements when calculating gravity and changes in sea levels.[50]

Laplace's tidal equations edit

 
A. Lunar gravitational potential: this depicts the Moon directly over 30° N (or 30° S) viewed from above the Northern Hemisphere. Note however that the moon is never more than about 28.6° north of the equator.
 
B. This view shows same potential from 180° from view A. Viewed from above the Northern Hemisphere. Red up, blue down.

In 1776, Laplace formulated a single set of linear partial differential equations for tidal flow described as a barotropic two-dimensional sheet flow. Coriolis effects are introduced as well as lateral forcing by gravity. Laplace obtained these equations by simplifying the fluid dynamics equations, but they can also be derived from energy integrals via Lagrange's equation.

For a fluid sheet of average thickness D, the vertical tidal elevation ζ, as well as the horizontal velocity components u and v (in the latitude φ and longitude λ directions, respectively) satisfy Laplace's tidal equations:[51]

 

where Ω is the angular frequency of the planet's rotation, g is the planet's gravitational acceleration at the mean ocean surface, a is the planetary radius, and U is the external gravitational tidal-forcing potential.

William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) rewrote Laplace's momentum terms using the curl to find an equation for vorticity. Under certain conditions this can be further rewritten as a conservation of vorticity.

Tidal analysis and prediction edit

Harmonic analysis edit

 
Spectrum of tides measured at Ft. Pulaski in 2012. Data downloaded from http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/datums.html?id=8670870 Fourier transform computed with https://sourceforge.net/projects/amoreaccuratefouriertransform/

Laplace's improvements in theory were substantial, but they still left prediction in an approximate state. This position changed in the 1860s when the local circumstances of tidal phenomena were more fully brought into account by William Thomson's application of Fourier analysis to the tidal motions as harmonic analysis. Thomson's work in this field was further developed and extended by George Darwin, applying the lunar theory current in his time. Darwin's symbols for the tidal harmonic constituents are still used.

Darwin's harmonic developments of the tide-generating forces were later improved when A.T. Doodson, applying the lunar theory of E.W. Brown,[52] developed the tide-generating potential (TGP) in harmonic form, distinguishing 388 tidal frequencies.[53] Doodson's work was carried out and published in 1921.[54] Doodson devised a practical system for specifying the different harmonic components of the tide-generating potential, the Doodson numbers, a system still in use.

Since the mid-twentieth century further analysis has generated many more terms than Doodson's 388. About 62 constituents are of sufficient size to be considered for possible use in marine tide prediction, but sometimes many fewer can predict tides to useful accuracy. The calculations of tide predictions using the harmonic constituents are laborious, and from the 1870s to about the 1960s they were carried out using a mechanical tide-predicting machine, a special-purpose form of analog computer. More recently digital computers, using the method of matrix inversion, are used to determine the tidal harmonic constituents directly from tide gauge records.

Tidal constituents edit

 
Tidal prediction summing constituent parts.

Tidal constituents combine to give an endlessly varying aggregate because of their different and incommensurable frequencies: the effect is visualized in an animation of the American Mathematical Society illustrating the way in which the components used to be mechanically combined in the tide-predicting machine. Amplitudes (half of peak-to-peak amplitude) of tidal constituents are given below for six example locations: Eastport, Maine (ME),[55] Biloxi, Mississippi (MS), San Juan, Puerto Rico (PR), Kodiak, Alaska (AK), San Francisco, California (CA), and Hilo, Hawaii (HI).

Semi-diurnal edit

Species Darwin
symbol
Period
(h)
Speed
(°/h)
Doodson coefficients Doodson
number
Amplitude at example location (cm) NOAA
order
n1 (L) n2 (m) n3 (y) n4 (mp) ME MS PR AK CA HI
Principal lunar semidiurnal M2 12.4206012 28.9841042 2 255.555 268.7 3.9 15.9 97.3 58.0 23.0 1
Principal solar semidiurnal S2 12 30 2 2 −2 273.555 42.0 3.3 2.1 32.5 13.7 9.2 2
Larger lunar elliptic semidiurnal N2 12.65834751 28.4397295 2 −1 1 245.655 54.3 1.1 3.7 20.1 12.3 4.4 3
Larger lunar evectional ν2 12.62600509 28.5125831 2 −1 2 −1 247.455 12.6 0.2 0.8 3.9 2.6 0.9 11
Variational μ2 12.8717576 27.9682084 2 −2 2 237.555 2.0 0.1 0.5 2.2 0.7 0.8 13
Lunar elliptical semidiurnal second-order 2N2 12.90537297 27.8953548 2 −2 2 235.755 6.5 0.1 0.5 2.4 1.4 0.6 14
Smaller lunar evectional λ2 12.22177348 29.4556253 2 1 −2 1 263.655 5.3 0.1 0.7 0.6 0.2 16
Larger solar elliptic T2 12.01644934 29.9589333 2 2 −3 272.555 3.7 0.2 0.1 1.9 0.9 0.6 27
Smaller solar elliptic R2 11.98359564 30.0410667 2 2 −1 274.555 0.9 0.2 0.1 0.1 28
Shallow water semidiurnal 2SM2 11.60695157 31.0158958 2 4 −4 291.555 0.5 31
Smaller lunar elliptic semidiurnal L2 12.19162085 29.5284789 2 1 −1 265.455 13.5 0.1 0.5 2.4 1.6 0.5 33
Lunisolar semidiurnal K2 11.96723606 30.0821373 2 2 275.555 11.6 0.9 0.6 9.0 4.0 2.8 35

Diurnal edit

Species Darwin
symbol
Period
(h)
Speed
(°/h)
Doodson coefficients Doodson
number
Amplitude at example location (cm) NOAA
order
n1 (L) n2 (m) n3 (y) n4 (mp) ME MS PR AK CA HI
Lunar diurnal K1 23.93447213 15.0410686 1 1 165.555 15.6 16.2 9.0 39.8 36.8 16.7 4
Lunar diurnal O1 25.81933871 13.9430356 1 −1 145.555 11.9 16.9 7.7 25.9 23.0 9.2 6
Lunar diurnal OO1 22.30608083 16.1391017 1 3 185.555 0.5 0.7 0.4 1.2 1.1 0.7 15
Solar diurnal S1 24 15 1 1 −1 164.555 1.0 0.5 1.2 0.7 0.3 17
Smaller lunar elliptic diurnal M1 24.84120241 14.4920521 1 155.555 0.6 1.2 0.5 1.4 1.1 0.5 18
Smaller lunar elliptic diurnal J1 23.09848146 15.5854433 1 2 −1 175.455 0.9 1.3 0.6 2.3 1.9 1.1 19
Larger lunar evectional diurnal ρ 26.72305326 13.4715145 1 −2 2 −1 137.455 0.3 0.6 0.3 0.9 0.9 0.3 25
Larger lunar elliptic diurnal Q1 26.868350 13.3986609 1 −2 1 135.655 2.0 3.3 1.4 4.7 4.0 1.6 26
Larger elliptic diurnal 2Q1 28.00621204 12.8542862 1 −3 2 125.755 0.3 0.4 0.2 0.7 0.4 0.2 29
Solar diurnal P1 24.06588766 14.9589314 1 1 −2 163.555 5.2 5.4 2.9 12.6 11.6 5.1 30

Long period edit

Species Darwin
symbol
Period
(h)
(days)
Speed
(°/h)
Doodson coefficients Doodson
number
Amplitude at example location (cm) NOAA
order
n1 (L) n2 (m) n3 (y) n4 (mp) ME MS PR AK CA HI
Lunar monthly Mm 661.3111655
27.554631896
0.5443747 0 1 −1 65.455 0.7 1.9 20
Solar semiannual Ssa 4383.076325
182.628180208
0.0821373 0 2 57.555 1.6 2.1 1.5 3.9 21
Solar annual Sa 8766.15265
365.256360417
0.0410686 0 1 56.555 5.5 7.8 3.8 4.3 22
Lunisolar synodic fortnightly MSf 354.3670666
14.765294442
1.0158958 0 2 −2 73.555 1.5 23
Lunisolar fortnightly Mf 327.8599387
13.660830779
1.0980331 0 2 75.555 1.4 2.0 0.7 24

Short period edit

Species Darwin
symbol
Period
(h)
Speed
(°/h)
Doodson coefficients Doodson
number
Amplitude at example location (cm) NOAA
order
n1 (L) n2 (m) n3 (y) n4 (mp) ME MS PR AK CA HI
Shallow water overtides of principal lunar M4 6.210300601 57.9682084 4 455.555 6.0 0.6 0.9 2.3 5
Shallow water overtides of principal lunar M6 4.140200401 86.9523127 6 655.555 5.1 0.1 1.0 7
Shallow water terdiurnal MK3 8.177140247 44.0251729 3 1 365.555 0.5 1.9 8
Shallow water overtides of principal solar S4 6 60 4 4 −4 491.555 0.1 9
Shallow water quarter diurnal MN4 6.269173724 57.4238337 4 −1 1 445.655 2.3 0.3 0.9 10
Shallow water overtides of principal solar S6 4 90 6 6 −6 * 0.1 12
Lunar terdiurnal M3 8.280400802 43.4761563 3 355.555 0.5 32
Shallow water terdiurnal 2MK3 8.38630265 42.9271398 3 −1 345.555 0.5 0.5 1.4 34
Shallow water eighth diurnal M8 3.105150301 115.9364166 8 855.555 0.5 0.1 36
Shallow water quarter diurnal MS4 6.103339275 58.9841042 4 2 −2 473.555 1.8 0.6 1.0 37

Doodson numbers edit

In order to specify the different harmonic components of the tide-generating potential, Doodson devised a practical system which is still in use, involving what are called the Doodson numbers based on the six Doodson arguments or Doodson variables. The number of different tidal frequency components is large, but each corresponds to a specific linear combination of six frequencies using small-integer multiples, positive or negative. In principle, these basic angular arguments can be specified in numerous ways; Doodson's choice of his six "Doodson arguments" has been widely used in tidal work. In terms of these Doodson arguments, each tidal frequency can then be specified as a sum made up of a small integer multiple of each of the six arguments. The resulting six small integer multipliers effectively encode the frequency of the tidal argument concerned, and these are the Doodson numbers: in practice all except the first are usually biased upwards by +5 to avoid negative numbers in the notation. (In the case that the biased multiple exceeds 9, the system adopts X for 10, and E for 11.)[56]

The Doodson arguments are specified in the following way, in order of decreasing frequency:[56]

  is mean Lunar time, the Greenwich hour angle of the mean Moon plus 12 hours.
  is the mean longitude of the Moon.
  is the mean longitude of the Sun.
  is the longitude of the Moon's mean perigee.
  is the negative of the longitude of the Moon's mean ascending node on the ecliptic.
  or   is the longitude of the Sun's mean perigee.

In these expressions, the symbols  ,  ,   and   refer to an alternative set of fundamental angular arguments (usually preferred for use in modern lunar theory), in which:-

  is the mean anomaly of the Moon (distance from its perigee).
  is the mean anomaly of the Sun (distance from its perigee).
  is the Moon's mean argument of latitude (distance from its node).
  is the Moon's mean elongation (distance from the sun).

It is possible to define several auxiliary variables on the basis of combinations of these.

In terms of this system, each tidal constituent frequency can be identified by its Doodson numbers. The strongest tidal constituent "M2" has a frequency of 2 cycles per lunar day, its Doodson numbers are usually written 255.555, meaning that its frequency is composed of twice the first Doodson argument, and zero times all of the others. The second strongest tidal constituent "S2" is influenced by the sun, and its Doodson numbers are 273.555, meaning that its frequency is composed of twice the first Doodson argument, +2 times the second, -2 times the third, and zero times each of the other three.[57] This aggregates to the angular equivalent of mean solar time +12 hours. These two strongest component frequencies have simple arguments for which the Doodson system might appear needlessly complex, but each of the hundreds of other component frequencies can be briefly specified in a similar way, showing in the aggregate the usefulness of the encoding.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In all the oceans the water remains at all times the same in quantity, and never, increases or diminishes; but like the water in a caldron, which, in consequence of its combination with heat, expands, so the waters of the ocean swell with the increase of the moon. The waters, although really neither more nor less, dilate or contract as the moon increases or wanes in the light and dark fortnights. - The Vishnu Purana book II ch. IV
  2. ^ Now I myself have seen among the Celts the ocean tides just as they are described. After making various conjectures about why so vast a bulk of waters recedes and advances, I have come to the conclusion that Apollonius discerned the real truth. For in one of his letters to the Indians he says that the ocean is driven by submarine influences or spirits out of several chasms which the earth afford both underneath and around it, to advance outwards, and to recede again, whenever the influence or spirit, like the breath of our bodies, gives way and recedes. And this theory is confirmed by the course run by diseases in Gadeira, for at the time of high water the souls of the dying do not quit the bodies, and this would hardly happen, he says, unless the influence or spirit I have spoken of was also advancing towards the land. They also tell you of certain phenomena of the ocean in connection with the phases of the moon, according as it is born and reaches fullness and wanes. These phenomena I verified, for the ocean exactly keeps pace with the size of the moon, decreasing and increasing with her. - Philostratus, The Life of Apollonius of Tyana, V
  3. ^ "Orbis virtutis tractoriæ, quæ est in Luna, porrigitur utque ad Terras, & prolectat aquas sub Zonam Torridam, … Celeriter vero Luna verticem transvolante, cum aquæ tam celeriter sequi non possint, fluxus quidem fit Oceani sub Torrida in Occidentem, … " ("The sphere of the lifting power, which is [centered] in the moon, is extended as far as to the earth and attracts the waters under the torrid zone, … However the moon flies swiftly across the zenith; because the waters cannot follow so quickly, the tide of the ocean under the torrid [zone] is indeed made to the west, …")[19]

References edit

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  47. ^ . 15 June 2000. Archived from the original on 18 September 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  48. ^ http://www.geomag.us/info/Ocean/m2_CHAMP+longwave_SSH.swf
  49. ^ "OSU Tidal Data Inversion". Volkov.oce.orst.edu. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
  50. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 April 2015.
  51. ^ "The Laplace Tidal Equations and Atmospheric Tides" (PDF).[permanent dead link]
  52. ^ Cartwright, David Edgar (1999). Tides: A Scientific History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 163–164. ISBN 9780521797467.
  53. ^ S Casotto, F Biscani, "A fully analytical approach to the harmonic development of the tide-generating potential accounting for precession, nutation, and perturbations due to figure and planetary terms", AAS Division on Dynamical Astronomy, April 2004, vol.36(2), 67.
  54. ^ A T Doodson (1921), "The Harmonic Development of the Tide-Generating Potential", Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Vol. 100, No. 704 (1 December 1921), pp. 305–329.
  55. ^ NOAA. "Eastport, ME Tidal Constituents". NOAA. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  56. ^ a b Melchior, P. (1971). "Precession-nutations and tidal potential". Celestial Mechanics. 4 (2): 190–212. Bibcode:1971CeMec...4..190M. doi:10.1007/BF01228823. S2CID 126219362. and T D Moyer (2003) already cited.
  57. ^ See for example Melchior (1971), already cited, at p.191.

External links edit

  • Contributions of satellite laser ranging to the studies of earth tides
  • Dynamic Theory of Tides
  • Tidal Observations
  • Publications from NOAA's Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services
    • Understanding Tides
    • 150 Years of Tides on the Western Coast
    • Our Relentless Tides
    • GeoTide Tidal Analysis System

theory, tides, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, ass. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The theory of tides is the application of continuum mechanics to interpret and predict the tidal deformations of planetary and satellite bodies and their atmospheres and oceans especially Earth s oceans under the gravitational loading of another astronomical body or bodies especially the Moon and Sun High and low tide in the Bay of Fundy Contents 1 History 1 1 Australian Aboriginal astronomy 1 2 Classical era 1 3 Medieval period 1 4 Modern era 1 4 1 Dynamic theory 1 4 2 Laplace s tidal equations 2 Tidal analysis and prediction 2 1 Harmonic analysis 2 2 Tidal constituents 2 2 1 Semi diurnal 2 2 2 Diurnal 2 2 3 Long period 2 2 4 Short period 2 3 Doodson numbers 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editAustralian Aboriginal astronomy edit The Yolngu people of northeastern Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory of Australia identified a link between the Moon and the tides which they mythically attributed to the Moon filling with water and emptying out again 1 2 Classical era edit The tides received relatively little attention in the civilizations around the Mediterranean Sea as the tides there are relatively small and the areas that experience tides do so unreliably 3 4 5 A number of theories were advanced however from comparing the movements to breathing or blood flow to theories involving whirlpools or river cycles 4 A similar breathing earth idea was considered by some Asian thinkers 6 Plato reportedly believed that the tides were caused by water flowing in and out of undersea caverns 3 Crates of Mallus attributed the tides to the counter movement ἀntispasmos of the sea and Apollodorus of Corcyra to the refluxes from the Ocean 7 An ancient Indian Purana text dated to 400 300 BC refers to the ocean rising and falling because of heat expansion from the light of the Moon a 8 Ultimately the link between the Moon and Sun and the tides became known to the Greeks although the exact date of discovery is unclear references to it are made in sources such as Pytheas of Massilia in 325 BC and Pliny the Elder s Natural History in 77 AD Although the schedule of the tides and the link to lunar and solar movements was known the exact mechanism that connected them was unclear 4 Classicists Thomas Little Heath claimed that both Pytheas and Posidonius connected the tides with the moon the former directly the latter through the setting up of winds 7 Seneca mentions in De Providentia the periodic motion of the tides controlled by the lunar sphere 9 Eratosthenes 3rd century BC and Posidonius 1st century BC both produced detailed descriptions of the tides and their relationship to the phases of the Moon Posidonius in particular making lengthy observations of the sea on the Spanish coast although little of their work survived The influence of the Moon on tides was mentioned in Ptolemy s Tetrabiblos as evidence of the reality of astrology 3 10 Seleucus of Seleucia is thought to have theorized around 150 BC that tides were caused by the Moon as part of his heliocentric model 11 12 Aristotle judging from discussions of his beliefs in other sources is thought to have believed the tides were caused by winds driven by the Sun s heat and he rejected the theory that the Moon caused the tides An apocryphal legend claims that he committed suicide in frustration with his failure to fully understand the tides 3 Heraclides also held the sun sets up winds and that these winds when they blow cause the high tide and when they cease the low tide 7 Dicaearchus also put the tides down to the direct action of the sun according to its position 7 Philostratus discusses tides in Book Five of Life of Apollonius of Tyana circa 217 238 AD he was vaguely aware of a correlation of the tides with the phases of the Moon but attributed them to spirits moving water in and out of caverns which he connected with the legend that spirits of the dead cannot move on at certain phases of the Moon b Medieval period edit The Venerable Bede discusses the tides in The Reckoning of Time and shows that the twice daily timing of tides is related to the Moon and that the lunar monthly cycle of spring and neap tides is also related to the Moon s position He goes on to note that the times of tides vary along the same coast and that the water movements cause low tide at one place when there is high tide elsewhere 13 However he made no progress regarding the question of how exactly the Moon created the tides 4 Medieval rule of thumb methods for predicting tides were said to allow one to know what Moon makes high water from the Moon s movements 14 Dante references the Moon s influence on the tides in his Divine Comedy 15 3 Medieval European understanding of the tides was often based on works of Muslim astronomers which became available through Latin translation starting from the 12th century 16 Abu Ma shar al Balkhi in his Introductorium in astronomiam taught that ebb and flood tides were caused by the Moon 16 Abu Ma shar discussed the effects of wind and Moon s phases relative to the Sun on the tides 16 In the 12th century al Bitruji contributed the notion that the tides were caused by the general circulation of the heavens 16 Medieval Arabic astrologers frequently referenced the Moon s influence on the tides as evidence for the reality of astrology some of their treatises on the topic influenced western Europe 10 3 Some theorized that the influence was caused by lunar rays heating the ocean s floor 5 Modern era edit Simon Stevin in his 1608 De spiegheling der Ebbenvloet The Theory of Ebb and Flood dismisses a large number of misconceptions that still existed about ebb and flood Stevin pleads for the idea that the attraction of the Moon was responsible for the tides and writes in clear terms about ebb flood spring tide and neap tide stressing that further research needed to be made 17 18 In 1609 Johannes Kepler correctly suggested that the gravitation of the Moon causes the tides c which he compared to magnetic attraction 20 4 21 22 basing his argument upon ancient observations and correlations In 1616 Galileo Galilei wrote Discourse on the Tides 23 He strongly and mockingly rejects the lunar theory of the tides 21 4 and tries to explain the tides as the result of the Earth s rotation and revolution around the Sun believing that the oceans moved like water in a large basin as the basin moves so does the water 24 Therefore as the Earth revolves the force of the Earth s rotation causes the oceans to alternately accelerate and retardate 25 His view on the oscillation and alternately accelerated and retardated motion of the Earth s rotation is a dynamic process that deviated from the previous dogma which proposed a process of expansion and contraction of seawater 26 However Galileo s theory was erroneous 23 In subsequent centuries further analysis led to the current tidal physics Galileo tried to use his tidal theory to prove the movement of the Earth around the Sun Galileo theorized that because of the Earth s motion borders of the oceans like the Atlantic and Pacific would show one high tide and one low tide per day The Mediterranean Sea had two high tides and low tides though Galileo argued that this was a product of secondary effects and that his theory would hold in the Atlantic However Galileo s contemporaries noted that the Atlantic also had two high tides and low tides per day which led to Galileo omitting this claim from his 1632 Dialogue 27 Rene Descartes theorized that the tides alongside the movement of planets etc were caused by aetheric vortices without reference to Kepler s theories of gravitation by mutual attraction this was extremely influential with numerous followers of Descartes expounding on this theory throughout the 17th century particularly in France 28 However Descartes and his followers acknowledged the influence of the Moon speculating that pressure waves from the Moon via the aether were responsible for the correlation 5 29 6 30 nbsp Newton s three body modelNewton in the Principia provides a correct explanation for the tidal force which can be used to explain tides on a planet covered by a uniform ocean but which takes no account of the distribution of the continents or ocean bathymetry 31 Dynamic theory edit While Newton explained the tides by describing the tide generating forces and Daniel Bernoulli gave a description of the static reaction of the waters on Earth to the tidal potential the dynamic theory of tides developed by Pierre Simon Laplace in 1775 32 describes the ocean s real reaction to tidal forces 33 Laplace s theory of ocean tides takes into account friction resonance and natural periods of ocean basins It predicts the large amphidromic systems in the world s ocean basins and explains the oceanic tides that are actually observed 34 The equilibrium theory based on the gravitational gradient from the Sun and Moon but ignoring the Earth s rotation the effects of continents and other important effects could not explain the real ocean tides 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Since measurements have confirmed the dynamic theory many things have possible explanations now like how the tides interact with deep sea ridges and chains of seamounts give rise to deep eddies that transport nutrients from the deep to the surface 43 The equilibrium tide theory calculates the height of the tide wave of less than half a meter while the dynamic theory explains why tides are up to 15 meters 44 Satellite observations confirm the accuracy of the dynamic theory and the tides worldwide are now measured to within a few centimeters 45 46 Measurements from the CHAMP satellite closely match the models based on the TOPEX data 47 48 49 Accurate models of tides worldwide are essential for research since the variations due to tides must be removed from measurements when calculating gravity and changes in sea levels 50 Laplace s tidal equations edit nbsp A Lunar gravitational potential this depicts the Moon directly over 30 N or 30 S viewed from above the Northern Hemisphere Note however that the moon is never more than about 28 6 north of the equator nbsp B This view shows same potential from 180 from view A Viewed from above the Northern Hemisphere Red up blue down In 1776 Laplace formulated a single set of linear partial differential equations for tidal flow described as a barotropic two dimensional sheet flow Coriolis effects are introduced as well as lateral forcing by gravity Laplace obtained these equations by simplifying the fluid dynamics equations but they can also be derived from energy integrals via Lagrange s equation For a fluid sheet of average thickness D the vertical tidal elevation z as well as the horizontal velocity components u and v in the latitude f and longitude l directions respectively satisfy Laplace s tidal equations 51 z t 1acos f l uD f vDcos f 0 u t v2Wsin f 1acos f l gz U 0 and v t u2Wsin f 1a f gz U 0 displaystyle begin aligned frac partial zeta partial t amp frac 1 a cos varphi left frac partial partial lambda uD frac partial partial varphi left vD cos varphi right right 0 2ex frac partial u partial t amp v 2 Omega sin varphi frac 1 a cos varphi frac partial partial lambda left g zeta U right 0 quad text and 2ex frac partial v partial t amp u 2 Omega sin varphi frac 1 a frac partial partial varphi left g zeta U right 0 end aligned nbsp where W is the angular frequency of the planet s rotation g is the planet s gravitational acceleration at the mean ocean surface a is the planetary radius and U is the external gravitational tidal forcing potential William Thomson Lord Kelvin rewrote Laplace s momentum terms using the curl to find an equation for vorticity Under certain conditions this can be further rewritten as a conservation of vorticity Tidal analysis and prediction editHarmonic analysis edit nbsp Spectrum of tides measured at Ft Pulaski in 2012 Data downloaded from http tidesandcurrents noaa gov datums html id 8670870 Fourier transform computed with https sourceforge net projects amoreaccuratefouriertransform Laplace s improvements in theory were substantial but they still left prediction in an approximate state This position changed in the 1860s when the local circumstances of tidal phenomena were more fully brought into account by William Thomson s application of Fourier analysis to the tidal motions as harmonic analysis Thomson s work in this field was further developed and extended by George Darwin applying the lunar theory current in his time Darwin s symbols for the tidal harmonic constituents are still used Darwin s harmonic developments of the tide generating forces were later improved when A T Doodson applying the lunar theory of E W Brown 52 developed the tide generating potential TGP in harmonic form distinguishing 388 tidal frequencies 53 Doodson s work was carried out and published in 1921 54 Doodson devised a practical system for specifying the different harmonic components of the tide generating potential the Doodson numbers a system still in use Since the mid twentieth century further analysis has generated many more terms than Doodson s 388 About 62 constituents are of sufficient size to be considered for possible use in marine tide prediction but sometimes many fewer can predict tides to useful accuracy The calculations of tide predictions using the harmonic constituents are laborious and from the 1870s to about the 1960s they were carried out using a mechanical tide predicting machine a special purpose form of analog computer More recently digital computers using the method of matrix inversion are used to determine the tidal harmonic constituents directly from tide gauge records Tidal constituents edit Further information Tide Constituents nbsp Tidal prediction summing constituent parts Tidal constituents combine to give an endlessly varying aggregate because of their different and incommensurable frequencies the effect is visualized in an animation of the American Mathematical Society illustrating the way in which the components used to be mechanically combined in the tide predicting machine Amplitudes half of peak to peak amplitude of tidal constituents are given below for six example locations Eastport Maine ME 55 Biloxi Mississippi MS San Juan Puerto Rico PR Kodiak Alaska AK San Francisco California CA and Hilo Hawaii HI Semi diurnal edit Species Darwin symbol Period h Speed h Doodson coefficients Doodson number Amplitude at example location cm NOAA ordern1 L n2 m n3 y n4 mp ME MS PR AK CA HIPrincipal lunar semidiurnal M2 12 4206012 28 9841042 2 255 555 268 7 3 9 15 9 97 3 58 0 23 0 1Principal solar semidiurnal S2 12 30 2 2 2 273 555 42 0 3 3 2 1 32 5 13 7 9 2 2Larger lunar elliptic semidiurnal N2 12 65834751 28 4397295 2 1 1 245 655 54 3 1 1 3 7 20 1 12 3 4 4 3Larger lunar evectional n2 12 62600509 28 5125831 2 1 2 1 247 455 12 6 0 2 0 8 3 9 2 6 0 9 11Variational m2 12 8717576 27 9682084 2 2 2 237 555 2 0 0 1 0 5 2 2 0 7 0 8 13Lunar elliptical semidiurnal second order 2N2 12 90537297 27 8953548 2 2 2 235 755 6 5 0 1 0 5 2 4 1 4 0 6 14Smaller lunar evectional l2 12 22177348 29 4556253 2 1 2 1 263 655 5 3 0 1 0 7 0 6 0 2 16Larger solar elliptic T2 12 01644934 29 9589333 2 2 3 272 555 3 7 0 2 0 1 1 9 0 9 0 6 27Smaller solar elliptic R2 11 98359564 30 0410667 2 2 1 274 555 0 9 0 2 0 1 0 1 28Shallow water semidiurnal 2SM2 11 60695157 31 0158958 2 4 4 291 555 0 5 31Smaller lunar elliptic semidiurnal L2 12 19162085 29 5284789 2 1 1 265 455 13 5 0 1 0 5 2 4 1 6 0 5 33Lunisolar semidiurnal K2 11 96723606 30 0821373 2 2 275 555 11 6 0 9 0 6 9 0 4 0 2 8 35Diurnal edit Species Darwin symbol Period h Speed h Doodson coefficients Doodson number Amplitude at example location cm NOAA ordern1 L n2 m n3 y n4 mp ME MS PR AK CA HILunar diurnal K1 23 93447213 15 0410686 1 1 165 555 15 6 16 2 9 0 39 8 36 8 16 7 4Lunar diurnal O1 25 81933871 13 9430356 1 1 145 555 11 9 16 9 7 7 25 9 23 0 9 2 6Lunar diurnal OO1 22 30608083 16 1391017 1 3 185 555 0 5 0 7 0 4 1 2 1 1 0 7 15Solar diurnal S1 24 15 1 1 1 164 555 1 0 0 5 1 2 0 7 0 3 17Smaller lunar elliptic diurnal M1 24 84120241 14 4920521 1 155 555 0 6 1 2 0 5 1 4 1 1 0 5 18Smaller lunar elliptic diurnal J1 23 09848146 15 5854433 1 2 1 175 455 0 9 1 3 0 6 2 3 1 9 1 1 19Larger lunar evectional diurnal r 26 72305326 13 4715145 1 2 2 1 137 455 0 3 0 6 0 3 0 9 0 9 0 3 25Larger lunar elliptic diurnal Q1 26 868350 13 3986609 1 2 1 135 655 2 0 3 3 1 4 4 7 4 0 1 6 26Larger elliptic diurnal 2Q1 28 00621204 12 8542862 1 3 2 125 755 0 3 0 4 0 2 0 7 0 4 0 2 29Solar diurnal P1 24 06588766 14 9589314 1 1 2 163 555 5 2 5 4 2 9 12 6 11 6 5 1 30Long period edit Species Darwin symbol Period h days Speed h Doodson coefficients Doodson number Amplitude at example location cm NOAA ordern1 L n2 m n3 y n4 mp ME MS PR AK CA HILunar monthly Mm 661 311165527 554631896 0 5443747 0 1 1 65 455 0 7 1 9 20Solar semiannual Ssa 4383 076325182 628180208 0 0821373 0 2 57 555 1 6 2 1 1 5 3 9 21Solar annual Sa 8766 15265365 256360417 0 0410686 0 1 56 555 5 5 7 8 3 8 4 3 22Lunisolar synodic fortnightly MSf 354 367066614 765294442 1 0158958 0 2 2 73 555 1 5 23Lunisolar fortnightly Mf 327 859938713 660830779 1 0980331 0 2 75 555 1 4 2 0 0 7 24Short period edit Species Darwin symbol Period h Speed h Doodson coefficients Doodson number Amplitude at example location cm NOAA ordern1 L n2 m n3 y n4 mp ME MS PR AK CA HIShallow water overtides of principal lunar M4 6 210300601 57 9682084 4 455 555 6 0 0 6 0 9 2 3 5Shallow water overtides of principal lunar M6 4 140200401 86 9523127 6 655 555 5 1 0 1 1 0 7Shallow water terdiurnal MK3 8 177140247 44 0251729 3 1 365 555 0 5 1 9 8Shallow water overtides of principal solar S4 6 60 4 4 4 491 555 0 1 9Shallow water quarter diurnal MN4 6 269173724 57 4238337 4 1 1 445 655 2 3 0 3 0 9 10Shallow water overtides of principal solar S6 4 90 6 6 6 0 1 12Lunar terdiurnal M3 8 280400802 43 4761563 3 355 555 0 5 32Shallow water terdiurnal 2MK3 8 38630265 42 9271398 3 1 345 555 0 5 0 5 1 4 34Shallow water eighth diurnal M8 3 105150301 115 9364166 8 855 555 0 5 0 1 36Shallow water quarter diurnal MS4 6 103339275 58 9841042 4 2 2 473 555 1 8 0 6 1 0 37Doodson numbers edit In order to specify the different harmonic components of the tide generating potential Doodson devised a practical system which is still in use involving what are called the Doodson numbers based on the six Doodson arguments or Doodson variables The number of different tidal frequency components is large but each corresponds to a specific linear combination of six frequencies using small integer multiples positive or negative In principle these basic angular arguments can be specified in numerous ways Doodson s choice of his six Doodson arguments has been widely used in tidal work In terms of these Doodson arguments each tidal frequency can then be specified as a sum made up of a small integer multiple of each of the six arguments The resulting six small integer multipliers effectively encode the frequency of the tidal argument concerned and these are the Doodson numbers in practice all except the first are usually biased upwards by 5 to avoid negative numbers in the notation In the case that the biased multiple exceeds 9 the system adopts X for 10 and E for 11 56 The Doodson arguments are specified in the following way in order of decreasing frequency 56 b1 t 8M p s displaystyle beta 1 tau theta M pi s nbsp is mean Lunar time the Greenwich hour angle of the mean Moon plus 12 hours b2 s F W displaystyle beta 2 s F Omega nbsp is the mean longitude of the Moon b3 h s D displaystyle beta 3 h s D nbsp is the mean longitude of the Sun b4 p s l displaystyle beta 4 p s l nbsp is the longitude of the Moon s mean perigee b5 N W displaystyle beta 5 N Omega nbsp is the negative of the longitude of the Moon s mean ascending node on the ecliptic b6 pl displaystyle beta 6 p l nbsp or ps s D l displaystyle p s s D l nbsp is the longitude of the Sun s mean perigee In these expressions the symbols l displaystyle l nbsp l displaystyle l nbsp F displaystyle F nbsp and D displaystyle D nbsp refer to an alternative set of fundamental angular arguments usually preferred for use in modern lunar theory in which l displaystyle l nbsp is the mean anomaly of the Moon distance from its perigee l displaystyle l nbsp is the mean anomaly of the Sun distance from its perigee F displaystyle F nbsp is the Moon s mean argument of latitude distance from its node D displaystyle D nbsp is the Moon s mean elongation distance from the sun It is possible to define several auxiliary variables on the basis of combinations of these In terms of this system each tidal constituent frequency can be identified by its Doodson numbers The strongest tidal constituent M2 has a frequency of 2 cycles per lunar day its Doodson numbers are usually written 255 555 meaning that its frequency is composed of twice the first Doodson argument and zero times all of the others The second strongest tidal constituent S2 is influenced by the sun and its Doodson numbers are 273 555 meaning that its frequency is composed of twice the first Doodson argument 2 times the second 2 times the third and zero times each of the other three 57 This aggregates to the angular equivalent of mean solar time 12 hours These two strongest component frequencies have simple arguments for which the Doodson system might appear needlessly complex but each of the hundreds of other component frequencies can be briefly specified in a similar way showing in the aggregate the usefulness of the encoding See also editLong period tide Lunar node Effect on tides Kelvin wave Tidal tableNotes edit In all the oceans the water remains at all times the same in quantity and never increases or diminishes but like the water in a caldron which in consequence of its combination with heat expands so the waters of the ocean swell with the increase of the moon The waters although really neither more nor less dilate or contract as the moon increases or wanes in the light and dark fortnights The Vishnu Purana book II ch IV Now I myself have seen among the Celts the ocean tides just as they are described After making various conjectures about why so vast a bulk of waters recedes and advances I have come to the conclusion that Apollonius discerned the real truth For in one of his letters to the Indians he says that the ocean is driven by submarine influences or spirits out of several chasms which the earth afford both underneath and around it to advance outwards and to recede again whenever the influence or spirit like the breath of our bodies gives way and recedes And this theory is confirmed by the course run by diseases in Gadeira for at the time of high water the souls of the dying do not quit the bodies and this would hardly happen he says unless the influence or spirit I have spoken of was also advancing towards the land They also tell you of certain phenomena of the ocean in connection with the phases of the moon according as it is born and reaches fullness and wanes These phenomena I verified for the ocean exactly keeps pace with the size of the moon decreasing and increasing with her Philostratus The Life of Apollonius of Tyana V Orbis virtutis tractoriae quae est in Luna porrigitur utque ad Terras amp prolectat aquas sub Zonam Torridam Celeriter vero Luna verticem transvolante cum aquae tam celeriter sequi non possint fluxus quidem fit Oceani sub Torrida in Occidentem The sphere of the lifting power which is centered in the moon is extended as far as to the earth and attracts the waters under the torrid zone However the moon flies swiftly across the zenith because the waters cannot follow so quickly the tide of the ocean under the torrid zone is indeed made to the west 19 References edit Moon Australian Indigenous Astronomy Retrieved 8 October 2020 Bridging the Gap through Australian Cultural Astronomy Archaeoastronomy amp Ethnoastronomy Building Bridges Between Cultures 282 290 2011 a b c d e f Tabarroni G 1989 The tides and Newton Memorie della Societa Astronomia Italiana 60 770 777 Bibcode 1989MmSAI 60 769T Retrieved 27 December 2020 a b c d e f Marmer H A March 1922 The Problems of the Tide The Scientific Monthly 14 3 209 222 a b c Pugh David T 28 December 1987 Tides Surges and Mean Sea Level PDF JOHN WILEY amp SONS pp 2 4 ISBN 047191505X Retrieved 27 December 2020 a b Understanding Tides From Ancient Beliefs toPresent day Solutions to the Laplace Equations PDF Vol 33 no 2 SIAM News a b c d Heath Thomas Little 1913 Aristarchus of Samos the ancient Copernicus Gerstein University of Toronto Oxford Clarendon Press pp 306 307 Cartwright David Edgar 1999 Tides A Scientific History Cambridge University Press p 6 ISBN 9780521797467 Retrieved 28 December 2020 Seneca De Providentia section IV a b Cartwright David E 2001 On the Origins of Knowledge of the Sea Tides from Antiquity to the Thirteenth Century Earth Sciences History 20 2 105 126 Bibcode 2001ESHis 20 105C doi 10 17704 eshi 20 2 m23118527q395675 JSTOR 24138749 Retrieved 27 December 2020 Lucio Russo Flussi e riflussi Feltrinelli Milano 2003 ISBN 88 07 10349 4 Van der Waerden B L 1987 The Heliocentric System in Greek Persian and Hindu Astronomy Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 500 1 525 545 Bibcode 1987NYASA 500 525V doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1987 tb37224 x S2CID 222087224 Bede 2004 The Reckoning of Time Translated by Faith Wallis Liverpool University Press pp 64 65 ISBN 978 0 85323 693 1 HUGHES PAUL A STUDY IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMITIVE AND MODERN TIDE TABLES PDF PhD Thesis Liverpool John Moores University Retrieved 27 December 2020 Inferno XVI 82 83 a b c d Marina Tolmacheva 2014 Glick Thomas F ed Geography Chorography Routledge p 188 ISBN 978 1135459321 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Simon Stevin Flanders Marine Institute pdf in Dutch Palmerino The Reception of the Galilean Science of Motion in Seventeenth Century Europe pp 200 op books google nl Johannes Kepler Astronomia nova 1609 p 5 of the Introductio in hoc opus Introduction to this work From page 5 Johannes Kepler Astronomia nova 1609 p 5 of the Introductio in hoc opus a b Popova Maria 27 December 2019 How Kepler Invented Science Fiction While Revolutionizing Our Understanding of the Universe Brain Pickings Retrieved 27 December 2020 Eugene Hecht 2019 Kepler and the origins of the theory of gravity American Journal of Physics 87 3 176 185 Bibcode 2019AmJPh 87 176H doi 10 1119 1 5089751 S2CID 126889093 a b Rice University Galileo s Theory of the Tides by Rossella Gigli retrieved 10 March 2010 Tyson Peter 29 October 2002 Galileo s Big Mistake NOVA PBS Retrieved 19 February 2014 Palmieri Paolo 1998 Re examining Galileo s Theory of Tides Springer Verlag p 229 Palmeri Paolo 1998 Re examining Galileo s Theory of Tides Springer Verlag p 227 Naylor Ron 2007 Galileo s Tidal Theory Isis 98 1 1 22 Bibcode 2007Isis 98 1N doi 10 1086 512829 PMID 17539198 S2CID 46174715 Aiton E J 1955 Descartes s theory of the tides Annals of Science 11 4 337 348 doi 10 1080 00033795500200335 Voltaire Letter XIV Archived from the original on 13 April 2021 Retrieved 28 December 2020 Cartwright David Edgar 1999 Tides A Scientific History Cambridge University Press p 31 ISBN 9780521797467 Retrieved 28 December 2020 Static Tides the equilibrium Theory Archived from the original on 10 April 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2014 Short notes on the Dynamical theory of Laplace 20 November 2011 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2015 http faculty washington edu luanne pages ocean420 notes tidedynamics pdf bare URL PDF http ocean kisti re kr downfile volume kess JGGHBA 2009 v30n5 JGGHBA 2009 v30n5 671 pdf bare URL PDF Tidal theory Archived 22 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine website South African Navy Hydrographic Office Dynamic theory for tides Oberlin edu Retrieved 2 June 2012 Dynamic Theory of Tides Dynamic Tides In contrast to static theory the dynamic theory of tides recognizes that water covers only three quarters o Web vims edu Archived from the original on 13 January 2013 Retrieved 2 June 2012 The Dynamic Theory of Tides Coa edu Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 2 June 2012 Welcome to nginx beacon salemstate edu Archived from the original on 14 December 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2022 Tides building river sea depth oceans effects important largest system wave effect marine Pacific Waterencyclopedia com 27 June 2010 Retrieved 2 June 2012 TIDES Ocean tamu edu Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 2 June 2012 Floor Anthoni Tides Seafriends org nz Retrieved 2 June 2012 The Cause amp Nature of Tides Scientific Visualization Studio TOPEX Poseidon images Svs gsfc nasa gov Retrieved 2 June 2012 TOPEX Poseidon Western Hemisphere Tide Height Model NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio Free Download amp Streaming Internet Archive 15 June 2000 TOPEX data used to model actual tides for 15 days from the year 2000 15 June 2000 Archived from the original on 18 September 2015 Retrieved 14 September 2015 http www geomag us info Ocean m2 CHAMP longwave SSH swf OSU Tidal Data Inversion Volkov oce orst edu Archived from the original on 22 October 2012 Retrieved 2 June 2012 Dynamic and residual ocean tide analysis for improved GRACE de aliasing DAROTA Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 The Laplace Tidal Equations and Atmospheric Tides PDF permanent dead link Cartwright David Edgar 1999 Tides A Scientific History Cambridge University Press pp 163 164 ISBN 9780521797467 S Casotto F Biscani A fully analytical approach to the harmonic development of the tide generating potential accounting for precession nutation and perturbations due to figure and planetary terms AAS Division on Dynamical Astronomy April 2004 vol 36 2 67 A T Doodson 1921 The Harmonic Development of the Tide Generating Potential Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series A Vol 100 No 704 1 December 1921 pp 305 329 NOAA Eastport ME Tidal Constituents NOAA Retrieved 22 May 2012 a b Melchior P 1971 Precession nutations and tidal potential Celestial Mechanics 4 2 190 212 Bibcode 1971CeMec 4 190M doi 10 1007 BF01228823 S2CID 126219362 and T D Moyer 2003 already cited See for example Melchior 1971 already cited at p 191 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Theory of tides Contributions of satellite laser ranging to the studies of earth tides Dynamic Theory of Tides Tidal Observations Publications from NOAA s Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services Understanding Tides 150 Years of Tides on the Western Coast Our Relentless Tides GeoTide Tidal Analysis System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theory of tides amp oldid 1217966975 Harmonic analysis, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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