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Ocean Waves and Tides 8 th Grade Science Chapter 18 section 3.

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Presentation on theme: "Ocean Waves and Tides 8 th Grade Science Chapter 18 section 3."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ocean Waves and Tides 8 th Grade Science Chapter 18 section 3

2 Waves  Wave Measurements 18.3 Waves and Tides Wave: rhythmic movement that carries E Crest—highest point of wave Trough—lowest point of wave The wave height is the vertical distance between the trough and crest. Amplitude—half the wave height Wavelength—the horizontal distance between two successive crests or two successive troughs.

3 Anatomy of a Wave

4 Waves  Wave Characteristics 18.3 Waves and Tides The wave period is the time it takes one full wave—one wavelength—to pass a fixed position. The height, length, and period that are eventually achieved by a wave depend on three factors: (1) wind speed, (2) length of time the wind has blown, and (3) fetch. Fetch is the distance that the wind has traveled across open water.

5 Waves  Wave Motion 18.3 Waves and Tides Circular motion allows energy to move forward through the water while the individual water particles that transmit the wave move around in a circle.

6 Waves  Breaking Waves 18.3 Waves and Tides Changes occur as a wave moves onto shore. As the waves touch bottom, wave speed decreases. The decrease in wave speed results in a decrease in wavelength and an increase in wave height. Wave crest falls as it breaks on shore

7 Breaking Waves

8 Tides  Ocean tides result from the gravitational attraction exerted upon Earth by the moon and, to a lesser extent, by the sun. 18.3 Waves and Tides  Tides are daily changes in the elevation of the ocean surface.  Tide-Causing Forces The force that produces tides is gravity.

9 Tide Bulges on Earth Caused by the Moon

10 Tides 18.3 Waves and Tides Spring tides are tides that have the greatest tidal range due to the alignment of the Earth–moon–sun system. Note: This has nothing to do with seasons! Tidal range is the difference in height between successive high and low tides. Neap tides are tides that have the lowest tidal range, occurring near the times of the first-quarter and third-quarter phases of the moon.

11 Earth–Moon–Sun Positions and the Tides Spring Tide: Solar and Lunar tides add Neap Tide: Solar and Lunar tides at right angle

12 Tidal Bores 18.3 Waves and Tides Tidal bore can cause surface water in river to reverse flow Example: Amazon River tidal bore moves 650 km upstream at speeds of 65 km/hr, causing 5 m wave Tidal bore occurs when rising tide enters river in narrow area


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