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Interplanetary Low TideTidal forces on Earth caused by other planets in the solar system will be at a low point this week when Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn "line up" on the far side of the Sun. |
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Above: This graphic by astronomer and mathematician Frank
Reed shows the relative magnitude of tidal stretching on Earth
due to Venus, Jupiter and Mars as a function of time between
1990 and 2007. The effect of the other planets is negligible
on this scale. The Sun and the Moon were not included in the
calculation. They exert tides that are about 10,000 times stronger
than the peak tides noted in this graph. Venus produces the strongest
tides on Earth because it comes closest to our planet. Jupiter's
tides are approximately 10 times weaker. In May 2000, the total planetary
tidal force felt on Earth is actually below average. [more information from
Frank Reed's planetary tides home page]
Ocean tides on Earth can be as high as 12 meters (40 ft) depending
on local geography and the alignment of the Moon and Sun. Earth
has solid ground tides too, but they amount to less than 20 centimeters
(about 8 inches).
"The force of Newtonian gravity falls off as the square of the distance," explains Lebo, "but tidal forces decline as its cube. Tides are caused by gravity, so why aren't they the same? The reason is simply that tidal stretching comes from a difference in the gravitational pull felt on two sides of a body. In a 1/r2 gravitational field, the difference in gravity between any two points falls off as the cube of the distance, not the square." Jupiter's Terrible Tides (Not!) After the Sun and the Moon, Venus is the object in our solar system that produces the biggest tides on Earth. This is simply because the Earth comes closer to Venus than any other planet. Even when the two are separated by their minimum distance of 0.3 AU, which happens every year and a half on average, Venus increases the size of our ocean tides by less than 0.005 cm. (Note: An AU, or "astronomical unit", is the distance between the Earth and the Sun. 1 AU = 1.5 x 108 km).
Right: In this table, adapted from the Griffith Observatory's "Planetary Alignments in 2000", the Sun exerts 1 unit of tidal force on the Earth; the Moon has a little more than twice the effect of the Sun; the other nine planets together with all their moons add only another one five-thousandth as much. That's not to say that Jupiter isn't a powerful source of tides in its vicinity. You just have to be nearby to feel them. The innermost of Jupiter's big moons, Io, experiences tidal forces nearly 20,000 times stronger than the forces we feel here on Earth due to the Moon. Solid tidal bulges on Io are about 100m high, taller than a 40-story building! This stretching triggers some of the most active volcanoes in the solar system. (See, e.g., Jupiter's Terrible Tides). Fortunately, Jupiter will be 928 million km (577 million miles) away on May 5, 2000, so the Earth won't have to endure the sort of extraordinary tidal stretching that Io undergoes every day.
So, if you're planning festivities for Cinco de Mayo on May 5, 2000, you can probably leave your earthquake gear in the closest. Tides won't be stretching our planet any more than usual when the planets get together behind the Sun. As an alternative, you may want to try catching the eta Aquarid meteor shower, a nice sky show expected to peak during the early morning hours of May 5th and 6th. |
| Web Links |
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5/5/2000:
The Meteor Shower
-see eta Aquarid meteors on May 5, 2000 Do planetary alignments cause
earthquakes?
- find out at badastronomy.com |
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