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ART. 334 - Notes concerning Tidal Oscillations upon a Rotating Globe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

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Summary

Speculations on tidal questions are much hampered by our ignorance of the peculiar influence of the earth's rotation in any but the simplest cases. The importance of this element was first appreciated by Laplace, and he succeeded in obtaining solutions of various problems relating to a globe completely covered with water to a depth either uniform throughout, or at any rate variable only with latitude. His work has been extended by Kelvin, G. Darwin, and Hough. For an excellent summary, reference may be made to Lamb's Hydrodynamics, which includes also important original additions to the theory.

But it must not be overlooked that a theory which supposes the globe to be completely covered with water has very little relation to our actual tides. Indeed, in practice, tidal prediction borrows nothing from Laplace's theory, unless it be to look for tidal periods corresponding with those of the generating forces. And this correspondence, although perhaps first brought into prominence in connection with Laplace's theory, is a general mechanical principle, not limited to hydrodynamics. If the theory of terrestrial tides is to advance, it can only be by discarding the imaginary globe completely covered with water and considering examples more nearly related to the facts, as was done in some degree by Young and Airy in their treatment of tides in canals.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 497 - 513
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1912

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