x

Like our Facebook Page

   
Early Times Newspaper Jammu, Leading Newspaper Jammu
 
Breaking News :   Pinegrove crowned champions of the 26th Bhupinder Memorial Soccer Tournament | GDC Ramgarh organizes Quiz Competition | Heartbreaking scenes as symbolic funerals held for 3 missing members of Digiana family | Vaishno Devi Yatra may resume on first Navratra | AAP’s political play: Turning Mehraj’s PSA case into expansion drive in J&K | Life returning to normal in Doda | PM Modi to visit Bihar today | 'Cong backing Pak-groomed terrorists' | CB books directors of pvt company, scammers, Govt employee among 8 for big frauds | 3 terror sympathisers arrested in Poonch | ‘Develop legal, tech solutions to act against elements behind AI-based fake news’ | Respect all Indian languages: Amit Shah’s appeal on Hindi Diwas | Man shoots himself dead | Cross-border drug smuggling attempt foiled | From decay to dynamism: How Modi is rebuilding Urban India | Remembering Pt.Tilka Lal Taploo& Other Martyrs | Linguistic Harmony | FICCI FLO JKL distributes flood relief material under in Jammu | Rise in dengue cases matter of concern: Balbir | TWS, Public Works Department collaborate to bring relief to flood affected communities | LG Kavinder pays obeisance at Siddhivinayak Temple | Drug peddler arrested with Heroin in Rehambal | DFC will unlock trade potential for Uttar Pradesh | Dr Manohar demands immediate relief to flood-affected victims | Viksit UP @2047: AI, biotech, green energy, and agritech to shape global identity | NHPC conferred with Rajbhahsha Kirti Puraskar | IIM Jammu conducts cleanliness drive as part of Swachhata Pakhwada | Restoration of critical connectivity on Mahanpur-Theyn Axis completed by BRO | Captain Tushar Mahajan Memorial Trust awards eminent educationist & meritorious students | "Hindi Hai Hind Ki Dhadkan" vibrant celebration of Hindi Diwas held at Pallanwala | 13th Triennial General Council of SBI Officers' Association, held at Panchkula | Indian Army conducts medical patrol in remote village of Rajouri | DD@66 - Doordarshan Foundation Day 2025: Shabdanjali | Liberty introduces two new technologies for Nation | Microplastics, Nanoplastics - Hidden Threats to Cardiovascular Health: Dr Sushil | Restore promised statehood to J&K to rebuild trust in democracy: Rattan Lal Gupta | SSP Udhampur chairs Ops-cum-Crime review meeting at DPL Udhampur | Textiles & Handicrafts Store at Srinagar Railway Station allotted through e-auction | Two Thieves Arrested, Stolen Motorcycle, Mobile Phones & Cash Recovered by Police | Interaction With ESM, Veer Naris & Widows at Jamola Rajouri | Crackdown on illegal mining by Samba police, seizes 14 vehicles including 6 dumpers | 9 vehicles including in illegal mining seized by Police | Public meeting of YRS held regarding upcoming celebration of Maharaja Hari Singh Ji Birth Anniversary | KPBB brings hope to flood-hit Jammu with discipline, compassion | IIM Jammu inaugurates second batch of Management Development Program | PM Modi writing golden chapter of J&K history: Rohiin Chandan | Centre for Molecular Biology, CUJ hosts Induction cum Orientation program | Dr. Sanjay Mohan delivers expert talk on Innovation, Startup Ecosystem Enablers | NMC urges PM to release pending instalments of DA | Spellbound performance on Bollywood Singer‘s Dogri Songs | Natrang Sunday theatre play “Shrimaan X” | BSF organises Medical Camps in Flood-Affected Areas in Jammu region | Department of Environmental Sciences organized Aurora 2025 - Orientation Programme | Back Issues  
 
news details
How the Moon 'Wobble' Affects Rising Tides
Vijay Garg9/18/2021 11:20:48 PM
With rapid industrialisation and increased technological complexity over the last two centuries, we seem to have lost touch with the magnitude of our effect on our surroundings. Today, our fingerprints on the environment can be found everywhere - the atmosphere, the oceans, and the Earth's surface. Not to be outdone, there is now another player, up in the sky - the moon, whose periodic "wobble" together with rising sea levels on Earth will make high tides even higher in the near future, eventually leading to devastating floods around the world. High tides are caused mostly by the gravitational pull exerted by the moon on Earth. But because our planet's lone natural satellite wobbles ever so slowly over a predictable 18.6-year cycle, the power of the pull varies from year to year. Nevertheless, the result is two simultaneous high tides: one on the side of Earth facing the moon, and the other on the opposite side. Earth rotates on its axis much faster than the moon revolves around it. Our planet's rapid rotation coupled with higher orbital speed about the Sun drags the tidal bulge ahead of the moon's orbit, while the moon's gravitational attraction tries to pull it backward. The Earth, therefore, feels a drag force known as tidal friction, which has slowed down its rotational period from five hours almost four billion years ago to 23 hours 56 minutes today. The moon takes the same time - 27.3 days - to rotate once on its axis as it takes to orbit the Earth. This is called synchronous rotation. In other words, the moon is tidally locked with Earth, which means we always see the same side of the moon, irrespective of where the moon is in its orbit. Additionally, there is an apparent wobbling and nodding of the moon, collectively called "libration." The wobbling is similar to the back-and-forth motion of a simple pendulum. It is an effect of the moon's non-uniform speed along its elliptic orbit around Earth. The orbital speed increases as the moon approaches the perigee, which is the point closest to the Earth. It decreases as it recedes from the perigee and approaches the apogee, the point farthest from the Earth. This gradual increase and decrease in the orbital speed causes the moon to wobble back and forth - at least to our eyes - by roughly seven degrees in the east-west direction. The wobbling motion also arises from the fact that the moon's rotational axis is not perpendicular to its orbital plane; it is tilted by 1.5 degrees. Furthermore, moon's orbital plane is inclined to Earth's orbital plane by about five degrees. The net effect of these inclinations is an up-and-down wobbling, or nodding, in a north-south direction. Alongside global warming, lunar wobbling can either exacerbate the severity of tides or counteract them. During one half of the 18.6-year wobbling cycle, high tides are lower than normal and low tides are higher than normal, so the difference between the two is rather small. As a result, it negates the effect of rising seas to some extent. During the other half of the cycle, high tides get bigger and low tides get lower, thereupon increasing the range between the highest and lowest tides. This cycle boosts the effects on the sea level rise. The moon is now in the tide-amplification cycle, but the sea level has not risen enough yet due to climate change for the effect to be pronounced. However, a new study by scientists from Nasa and the University of Hawaii published in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Nature Climate Change, only days before the recent destructive flood in western Europe, warns that Earth may experience record flooding in the mid-2030s, when the moon's next tide-amplification cycle is set to happen. By then, global sea levels will have risen enough to make the already elevated high tides especially troublesome. The study is the first to take into account all known oceanic and astronomical causes for floods. According to the study, these floods will exceed flooding thresholds in the coastal countries more often-as frequently as every day or every other day. They may even occur in clusters and can last as long as a month or more, depending on the positions of the moon, the Earth and the Sun. "It's the accumulated effect over time that will have an impact," the study warns. However, it also notes that the prediction does not apply uniformly to every coastline everywhere. Climate change has already increased the frequency and severity of hurricanes, floods and other extreme weather events around the world. This impending threat on the horizon could wreak additional havoc, thereby worsening the already grim predictions of climate change for people living along the coastlines. Some of the biggest cities on the US Atlantic and Gulf coasts, including New York City, Miami and New Orleans, will be hard hit. Osaka in Japan is also a major-risk city; climate models show it could "disappear" with rising tides. Other high-risk cities are Alexandria in Egypt, Rio de Janeiro in Brazil and Shanghai in China. It took Noah years to build an ark to save him and his family from a godless society that God was going to destroy by sending a catastrophic flood. Unlike Noah, we have 15 years, more or less, to build the ark of mitigation and adaptation necessary to save us from the calamitous effects of climate change. It is thus a race against time, because the flood is coming faster than many once thought. Keeping this in mind, Nasa's Sea Level Change Team is providing crucial information so that we can "plan, protect, and prevent damage to the environment and people's livelihoods affected by flooding." Finally, our moon, until now the quiescent mystical object majestically shining in the sky, has been "faithful to its nature and its power is never diminished." One of the powers it always flexed (albeit unnoticed by us) and will flex again approximately 15 years from now - but this time working in tandem with climate change - is its ability to create record floods. The floods will perhaps give our leaders, who are not doing enough to combat climate change, an alibi to throw in the towel by blaming the wobbling moon.
  Share This News with Your Friends on Social Network  
  Comment on this Story  
 
 
 
Early Times Android App
STOCK UPDATE
  
BSE Sensex
NSE Nifty
 
CRICKET UPDATE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
Home About Us Top Stories Local News National News Sports News Opinion Editorial ET Cetra Advertise with Us ET E-paper
 
 
J&K RELATED WEBSITES
J&K Govt. Official website
Jammu Kashmir Tourism
JKTDC
Mata Vaishnodevi Shrine Board
Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board
Shri Shiv Khori Shrine Board
UTILITY
Train Enquiry
IRCTC
Matavaishnodevi
BSNL
Jammu Kashmir Bank
State Bank of India
PUBLIC INTEREST
Passport Department
Income Tax Department
JK CAMPA
JK GAD
IT Education
Web Site Design Services
EDUCATION
Jammu University
Jammu University Results
JKBOSE
Kashmir University
IGNOU Jammu Center
SMVDU