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Old 10-31-2022, 04:04 PM
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Default The tide doesn't actually come in and out


Neil tries to explain why what you think about tides is wrong.

And goes even farther into wrong.

He probably doesn't even know it either.

:popcorn:
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Old 10-31-2022, 06:29 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

No one is going to watch a 13 minute video to try to figure out what you might think is wrong about it. So if you really want to discuss it you need to tell us what you think he is wrong about.
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Old 10-31-2022, 06:51 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

I always enjoy listening to those two chatter.

And, they're mostly correct, with some healthy over-simplifications for the masses.

The bit about the Black Hole navigation is kind of a farce. I will try to remember, should I ever find myself going into a Black hole, to pay attention and try to offer them some proper observations.
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Old 10-31-2022, 10:36 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out


To his credit, Neil prefaces everything with a disclaimer, which is wise and actually scientific.
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Old 10-31-2022, 10:38 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

So nice you posted it twice.
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Old 10-31-2022, 10:40 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

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Originally Posted by -FX- View Post
To his credit, Neil prefaces everything with a disclaimer, which is wise and actually scientific.
I mean, he is wise and an actual scientist, so...
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Old 10-31-2022, 10:40 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

It should start at the exact time where he is wrong

If that is not happening, I apologize.
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Old 10-31-2022, 10:41 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

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Originally Posted by Ensign Steve View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by -FX- View Post
To his credit, Neil prefaces everything with a disclaimer, which is wise and actually scientific.
I mean, he is wise and an actual scientist, so...
Yep. And I will bet actual money he might change his mind after he understands why he is wrong.
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Old 10-31-2022, 11:07 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Yes technically the drawing at 50 seconds is wrong, although I hesitate to give anyone a cookie for noticing that the earth doesn’t technically spin into a stationary ocean and not noticing that the spinning earth has a permanent light side and dark side.

The drawing does depict a flat earth, which is correct, so I’ll give them that!
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  #10  
Old 11-01-2022, 12:27 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

It's complicated by how the water slops around coastlines. There are four high tides per day* at Southampton, for example.

* or slightly more accurately, every 24 hours and 50 minutes.
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Old 11-01-2022, 02:19 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

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It's complicated by how the water slops around coastlines. There are four high tides per day* at Southampton, for example.

* or slightly more accurately, every 24 hours and 50 minutes.
Has anyone here been to the Bay of Fundy?
Talk about sloshing around the coastline,...
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Old 11-02-2022, 03:40 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

The Bay has resonance with the North Atlantic amphidrome.

The biggest thing Neil believes in, is shown here. It's right at the front of the video



The image shows the time as well

In plain speaking, there are no twin bulges. That he doesn't know this is an indicator of how much ignorance there is about the actual ocean tides.
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Old 11-02-2022, 03:41 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

All jokes and images of "twin bulges" are OK


Of course
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Old 11-03-2022, 03:27 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

"the water stretches" Yeah, his explanation of how tides happen is pretty much complete nonsense.
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Old 11-03-2022, 04:30 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

What we seem to have, here, is an over-complication of an attempt at an over-simplification of a not-too-complicated concept.
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Old 11-03-2022, 10:22 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

I don't think deGrasse would even understand
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Old 11-03-2022, 11:22 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Nvm
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Last edited by beyelzu; 11-04-2022 at 01:22 AM.
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Old 11-03-2022, 11:37 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Great. Now we'll get 50 pages of FX telling us that's wrong. Again. Thanks, bey.
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Old 11-03-2022, 11:41 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Nvm
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Old 11-03-2022, 11:44 PM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

He's right that there's no bulge of water traversing the globe underneath the moon, but he only starts (and continues for decades) these threads to troll.
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Old 11-04-2022, 01:17 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Edited nvm
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Old 11-04-2022, 05:01 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

I mean, it's very common, but the idea is completely wrong. If you had an inhomogeneous gravitational field that diminishes just like that of the Moon, but with field lines parallel, you wouldn't get tides. You would technically, but just 1mm or so. The reason tides exist is because the Moon pulls on the water at different angles. That gives a sideways component to the force, and that's what piles up the water. Simply put, the water wants to go where the Moon is, but it's held down, so it pushes sideways and the rest of the water can't go anywhere but up.
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Old 11-04-2022, 07:19 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

No
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Old 11-05-2022, 01:57 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Quote:
Originally Posted by LarsMac View Post
... a not-too-complicated concept.
The actual oceans tides are one of the most complicated things known to science. It wasn't until the TOPEX and JASON data was gathered that the most powerful models could almost predict the tides.

Almost.

There is very very many wrong things about the tides, even still.
Quote:
"French astronomer François Arago once said that studying the tides was the tomb of human curiosity."
How Tides Work? | Highbrow

No, he did not. Here's the actual text, from Bartleby

"If we descend from the heavens to the earth, the discoveries of Laplace will appear not less worthy of his genius. He reduced the phenomena of the tides, which an ancient philosopher termed in despair “the tomb of human curiosity,” to an analytical theory in which the physical conditions of the question figure for the first time."
Francois Arago (1786-1853), physicist, astronomer.

The biggest one is the "twin bulges", which simply isn't true. It's not even close.

Quote:
However, the earth itself is also being pulled towards the moon ever so slightly, which creates another high tide at the exact opposite end of the moon. Water is finite, so as the moon pulls water towards one end and the earth moving towards the moon creates high tides on the opposite end, the two sides are being deprived of water. Thus, if you picture the moon on the top of the earth in a two-dimensional view, the top and bottom of the Earth will have high tides while the two sides will be in low tide
Once you know there are no twin bulges, then you also know the three different explanations for them are also wrong.

I thought 12 years ago that the tides was a settled matter, but indeed, to most people it is still “the tomb of human curiosity”
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  #25  
Old 11-05-2022, 05:06 AM
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Default Re: The tide doesn't actually come in and out

Having spent many early years around the Sea, we always understood the tides.
However, it is often far easier to understand a thing than it is to explain it in Human languages.

I agree that the "Twin Bulges" notion is one of the more poorly expressed attempts.

The entire crust of the Earth is affected by the "Gravitational attraction" between the Moon and Earth, as well as the same between the Sun and Earth.
Being more malleable, the waters exhibit a more detectable reaction. What we call Tides are a manifestation of the process.

And, the Earth is not alone in the story, by any means. We can see similar behavior on Jupiter, Neptune, and Saturn. It is not about Water, at all, really.
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Last edited by LarsMac; 11-05-2022 at 05:21 AM.
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