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We have introduced tides
in our earlier discussion of the Moon's observational characteristics through
the effect of the Moon on the Earth's oceans, but the effect is much more
general, and has a number of important consequences.
Tidal Coupling and Gravitational LockingSome important consequences of
tidal forces in the Solar System include:
- Tidal forces will distort any body experiencing differential gravitational
forces. This will normally occur for bodies of finite extent in gravitational
fields because of the strong distance dependence of the gravitational force.
Thus, not only the oceans, but the body of the Earth is distorted by the Lunar
gravity. However, because the Earth is rigid compared with the oceans, the
"tides" in the body of the Earth are much smaller than in the oceans.
- There is a limiting radius for the orbit
of one body around another, inside of which the tidal forces are so
large that no large solid objects can exist that are held together only
by gravitational forces. This radius is called the Roche Limit. Thus,
solid objects put into orbit inside the Roche limit will be torn apart
by tidal forces, and conversely, solid objects cannot grow by accreting
into larger objects if they orbit inside the Roche limit. A famous example
is the
rings of Saturn: because they lie inside the Roche limit for Saturn,
they cannot be solid objects held together by gravitation and must be
composed of many small particles.
Obviously solid objects can exist inside the Roche limit (for example,
spacecraft) but they must be held together by forces other than gravity. This
is true of a spacecraft, where chemical forces between the atoms and molecules
are much larger than the gravitational forces.
- The tidal forces are reciprocal. Not only will the Moon induce tides in
the body of the Earth and the Earth's oceans, but by the same argument the
gravitational field of the Earth will induce differential forces and therefore
tides in the body of the Moon. Again, because the body of the Moon is quite
rigid these Lunar tides will be very small, but they occur.
- This reciprocal induction of tides in the body of the Earth and the Moon
leads to a complicated coupling of the rotational and orbital motions of the
two objects. These tidal forces and associated couplings have the following
general effects:
- The interior of the Earth and Moon
are heated by the tides in their bodies, just as a paper clip is
heated by constant bending. This effect is very small for the Earth
and Moon, but we shall see that it can be dramatic for other objects
that experience much larger differential gravitational forces and
therefore much larger tidal forces. For example, we shall see that
the tidal forces exerted by Jupiter
on its moon Io
are so large that the solid surface of Io is raised and lowered
by hundreds of meters twice in each rotational period. This motion
so heats the interior of Io that it is probably mostly molten; as
a consequence, Io is covered with active volcanos and is the geologically
most active object in the Solar System.
- The tidal coupling of the orbital
and rotational motion tends to synchronize them. In the simplest
instance, the period of rotation for the two bodies and the orbital
period eventually become exactly equal because of this tidal coupling
(and as a result, the size of the orbit is changed in such a way
as to conserve angular
momentum for the entire system). This is called gravitational
(or tidal) locking, because as the two objects revolve around their
common center of mass each keeps the same side turned toward the
other.
Tidal Coupling in the Earth-Moon SystemThus, the fact that the
rotational period of the Moon and the orbital period of the Earth-Moon system
are of the same length is not an accident. Presumably this was not always true,
but over billions of years the tidal coupling of the Earth and the Moon has led
to this synchronization. In the case of the Earth-Moon system the
synchronization is not yet complete. The Earth is slowly decreasing its
rotational period and eventually the Earth and Moon will have exactly the same
rotational period, and these will also exactly equal the orbital period. At the
same time, the separation between the Earth and Moon will slowly increase in
just such a way as to conserve angular momentum for the entire system.
Thus, billions of years from now the Earth will always keep the same face
turned toward the Moon, just as the Moon already always keeps the same face
turned toward the Earth. We will encounter other examples of such tidal locking
in other pairs of objects in the Solar System. |