English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

8 answers

the moon is usually up at some time during the day, but you can't always see it due to the brightness of the sun.
also there is an equivalent high tide on the opposite side of the earth to the moon as well
also the sun partly causes the tides as well, but to a lesser extent than the moon.

|Repost|
this should help confirm what I said
http://home.hiwaay.net/~krcool/Astro/moon/moontides/

the end
.

2007-10-06 03:25:37 · answer #1 · answered by The Wolf 6 · 2 1

Hi, Have you never seen the moon in the sky during the day? It can be seen at certain times.
Yes the moon causes high tides in the areas of the world that it closest to. The moon orbits the world and the world rotates in a way that the moon passes over a point on the earth twice a day. So there are two high tides and two low tides each day. Where i used to live in Scotland the time that the moon rose each day changed by about one hour each day so the high and low tides changed by about one hour each day. So as the lunar cycle passed the time of high and low tide changed. The moon also is in an eliptical orbit that brings it closer to the earth at times and further away at other times. This produces the effect of making the high tide even higher when the moon is close to the earth and lower than normal when the moon is further from the earth. These are called the Spring tide and Neep tide.

2007-10-06 03:45:05 · answer #2 · answered by Will in Spain 2 · 0 1

Good question! It confused many people for a long time.

The simple view of the Earth-Moon system is that the moon orbits the earth. In that case, you'd only expect one tide.

But the reality is that the Earth and Moon orbit each other. They each orbit around a common center of gravity, located very close to earth but not earth itself. Imagine a large person and a small person joining hands and swinging around and around. The smaller person will mostly orbit the larger person, but even the larger person is moving a bit.

That leads to two tides: one facing the moon, and the other is on the side of the earth directly opposite the moon, and that's from the centrifugal force of earth rotating around the common center of gravity of the Earth/Moon system.

2007-10-06 04:42:44 · answer #3 · answered by Thomas V 2 · 1 0

intense and coffee tides ought to do with gravitational pull from the moon. For length you will ought to envision the nearby area you're inquisitive approximately, because of the fact length, ameliorations in ft from intense to low or maybe what proportion time the tides replace in an afternoon has to do with region. For the posters above the two intense tides an afternoon isn't commonly happening some places in basic terms have one. And the situations replace progressively because of the fact the days bypass. midday is in basic terms not hight tide next week whether it incredibly is intense tide at midday on the instant.

2016-10-21 05:35:07 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

the moons rotation around earth isn't the same as the sun's. like Venus or mercury, a year is longer than a day there.

2007-10-06 03:30:34 · answer #5 · answered by andy h. 4 · 0 1

Just because you don't see the moon does not mean it is not there. The moon is there, it is just hidden by Earths shadow on the moon.

The Moon and Tides
http://home.hiwaay.net/~krcool/Astro/moon/moontides/

2007-10-06 03:31:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Because the Moon is still up there even when you can't see it.

2007-10-06 03:26:53 · answer #7 · answered by Charles C 7 · 1 1

because the earth rotates

2007-10-06 03:23:05 · answer #8 · answered by Psylence 4 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers