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Top 10 Cool Moon Facts
posted: 30 June 2005 06:41 am
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NUMBER 2
Ocean tug
Tides on Earth are caused mostly by the
Moon (the Sun has a smaller effect). Here's how it works:
The
Moon's gravity pulls on Earth's oceans. High tide aligns with the Moon as Earth
spins underneath. Another high tide occurs on the opposite side of the planet
because gravity pulls Earth toward the Moon more than it pulls the water.
At full Moon and new Moon, the Sun, Earth
and Moon are lined up, producing the higher than normal tides (called spring
tides, for the way they spring up). When the Moon is at first or last quarter,
smaller neap tides form. The Moon's 29.5-day orbit around Earth is not
quite circular. When the Moon is closest to Earth (called its perigee), spring
tides are even higher, and they're called perigean spring tides.
All this tugging has another interesting
effect: Some of Earth's rotational energy is stolen by the Moon, causing our
planet to slow down by about 1.5 milliseconds every century.
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