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Spring Tide

Astronomy Spring EquinoxSprite

Spring tides accompany the February Full Moon near mid month, and the New Moon toward the month's end. Spring tides are far from being equal, however, with their intensities depending on the closeness of the Moon.

 


spring tide
The tide which occurs near new or full moon, when the Moon and Sun are in alignment, thereby causing the greatest ranges between high and low tide.

spring tide: Ocean tide of high amplitude that occurs at full and new moon.
standard candle: Object of known brightness which astronomers use to find distance - for example, Cepheid variable stars and supernovae.

Spring Tide - An unusually high, high tide and unusually low, low tide that occur when the tidal forces of the Sun and Moon are aligned. This occurs at full moon and new moon ...

Spring Tides
Spring tides are especially strong tides (they do not have anything to do with the season Spring). They occur when the Earth, the Sun, and the Moon are in a line.

Spring tides are especially strong . They occur when the Earth, the sun, and the Moon are in a line. The gravitational forces of the Moon and the sun both contribute to the tides. Spring tides occur during the full moon and the new moon.

PROXIGEAN SPRING TIDE
The Proxigean Spring Tide (also called the proxigean tide) is a rare, unusually high tide.

spring tide tide that has a large change between low and high tide. It occurs at new and full phase, when the Moon's tidal effect is aligned with the Sun's tidal effect.

These are called spring tides (the name is not associated with the season of Spring).

When the pull from the Sun adds to that of the Moon the tides are large and we call them Spring tides whereas when the pulls are at 90 degrees the tides are small and we call them Neap tides.

These tides are known as spring tides, and they have nothing to do with Spring, but they occur when the Moon is either Full or New.

Perhaps the most obvious manifestation of the influence of the Moon on the Earth are the ocean tides, particularly the spring tides where the gravitational pull of the Sun and Moon combine to give the greatest effect.

Spring Tides occur at new and full moon, when the combined gravitation effect of the Sun and Moon act to make high tides higher and low tides lower.

Less obvious is the fact that a spring tide of a New Moon will be slightly more excessive that the spring tide caused by a Full Moon. That's because the New Moon and Sun are both "pulling together" (directly) on the oceans.

Lunar Eclipse, Mean Solar Time, Midnight, Mock Sun, Neap Tide, Noon, Opposition, Parsec, Partial Eclipse, Perihelion, Photosphere, Saros Cycle, Season, Solar Constant, Solar Day, Solar Eclipse, Solar System, Solar Wind, Solstice, Spring Tide, Star, ...

sun's, but as a result its pull is diminished, causing what are called neap tides. When the sun and moon line up relative to Earth, the two act together to create much greater high tides and much lower low tides, causing what are called spring tides.

Spring tides - The tides of the ocean are at their highest when the earth, moon, and sun are in a line.
Star - a ball of gas that makes its own light and heat because of nuclear reaction in its center.

See also: Sun, Earth, Spring, Moon, Phase

Astronomy Spring EquinoxSprite

 
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