How the tides REALLY work

How the tides REALLY work

Waterlust

1 год назад

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Greg Slakov
Greg Slakov - 23.10.2022 20:18

This is a wonderful piece of work. It makes a relatively complex thing easier to understand, without dumbing it down. Excellent eductation going on here.

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Science Busted
Science Busted - 30.09.2023 02:34

Scientists biggest lie

Scientists say that the earth is constantly radiating heat into space.

They don't understand that heat, light and energy coexist with atoms/matter. Empty space cannot carry heat, light and energy.

If heat, light and energy can be radiated into empty space, then we can use vacuum containers instead of cooling systems.

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tsurdyk
tsurdyk - 30.09.2023 00:53

"Literally thousands of years"? Seriously? How about for as long as there have been humans? Or for the tides themselves, since there's been large bodies of water on Earth, long before humans existed?

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Deepanker Singh
Deepanker Singh - 28.09.2023 16:13

Finally a video without the oversimplification of the moon's gravity and centrifugal force.

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barlow2976
barlow2976 - 28.09.2023 09:08

Good video, maybe not a good idea to teach a child to splash lots of water around electrics, even if externally rated.

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JTMD08
JTMD08 - 28.09.2023 07:09

Climate change lol

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Engy phonermp
Engy phonermp - 27.09.2023 20:43

That was SO WELL done!!! A wealth of information in a beautifully illustrative short video. So many questions that I've had about tides became clear in a matter of moments.

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Umski
Umski - 27.09.2023 00:16

I never knew the opposite tide was a problems issue - even 30 off years ago at school we were taught the concept of the earth moving toward the moon and leaving the bulge on the far side 🤷‍♂️

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Emily does roblox shorts
Emily does roblox shorts - 26.09.2023 18:21

Great explanation but I still have a question: when do you get a lower than usual Low tide?
You mentioned:
Spring tide, with extra high High & normal Low.
and Neap tide, with lower than usual High & Higher than usual Low tide.
I come from the coast of France where the tides are very low once a month (For 2 or 3 days in a row) and really, really low maybe once or twice a year during the equinox.

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MultiPleaser
MultiPleaser - 26.09.2023 00:58

Ah, finally, the perfect explanation. In summary, the tidal forces of a black hole will "spaghettify" anything drawn into it, or orbiting it. Same thing happens to any two orbiting objects, just to a lesser degree. Not spaghetti, but rather gnocchi, you know, a ball of pasta that has been flattened out and stretched a bit, or ovaled, or as they call the Earth: an oblate spheroid.

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Phil Joyce
Phil Joyce - 24.09.2023 22:34

Why the music? Much too intrusive a choice.

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Lo Ca
Lo Ca - 24.09.2023 18:55

Gosh I could live without the unnecessary background music.

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P Leblond
P Leblond - 24.09.2023 14:54

Wow. Amazing. And thank you

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Brendan Little
Brendan Little - 24.09.2023 09:33

the music is too loud

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andy green
andy green - 23.09.2023 09:16

Good video,dump the background music

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Pete Brandon
Pete Brandon - 22.09.2023 23:17

Please remove in the "music" so we can focus on the scientific context. Contrary to current video production trends, music does not help us to understand technical topics. It's distracting. Respectfully, Please stop it.

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Aeowyn
Aeowyn - 22.09.2023 22:30

I'd really like to watch this video but.... the music is soooo loud I had to turn it off. Shame.

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Raman Janakiraman
Raman Janakiraman - 22.09.2023 06:01

The volume of background music is quite annoying! Please either make it low or gentle or get rid of it! Thanks!

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The Edge
The Edge - 22.09.2023 03:42

GOOD STUFF

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Alex Lunghi
Alex Lunghi - 22.09.2023 00:46

I’ve always though the simple lunar explanation was faulty, now l understand why! Great video!
However, “LAKES ARE AFFECTED TOO” doesn’t seem right since their body of water isn’t connected all around the world and can’t move accordingly?!

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elisadealexandria
elisadealexandria - 22.09.2023 00:16

The music keeps distracting me and it gets harder to follow.

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Mike Gold
Mike Gold - 21.09.2023 21:03

Damn. I couldn't find any flat earthers here to troll 😅

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Jeff Metcalfe
Jeff Metcalfe - 21.09.2023 09:52

That was great! Thank you!:)

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Tiago Migolos
Tiago Migolos - 20.09.2023 23:18

nice content, could lower the music levels!

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John
John - 20.09.2023 12:53

may I request more mellow, less busy music in your backgrounds?

the rhythms were very strong and driving , conflicting with the cadence or your narration...like an intrusive costar who's trying to upstage you, the lead character.

thanks for all the good information on this topic ❤

all the best to you, sir

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Web Puddin
Web Puddin - 20.09.2023 05:05

This was really good. I watch lots of these kinds of videos, but some leave out certain things that, while they may be obvious to the expert, are not so to the layman. I think you built from very understandable basics up through the more complex systems, without getting into all the messiness that complex systems necessarily contain. It was enough to cover it in summary. Very well thought out and presented!

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photosphotos
photosphotos - 19.09.2023 23:01

The earth is flat and stationary, space is fake. Fresh water isn’t effected by tides.
Salt water is conductive, the sun and moon are small and close, and anode and a cathode.

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Nel Boy Bosque
Nel Boy Bosque - 19.09.2023 19:57

Consider removing background music when you are explaining. Great video thou

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Mike Wensel
Mike Wensel - 19.09.2023 16:44

Well done! I learned a lot from this. Thank you. I have a couple of comments with relation to this that I'd like to mention. The first thing that comes to mind when I think about the bulge at the equator is that the main thing at play here is the rotation of the earth and the centrifugal force being exerted on the oceans, and that the position of the moon has little to do with the resulting bulge. The effect of the moon's gravity and resulting tides are also the cause of wave action and the sloshing around of the waters in the oceans. No moon, no movement of earths ocean and maybe a little less bulge. Am I right?

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Rafael Santana
Rafael Santana - 19.09.2023 11:26

congrats. local knowledge is important but more important are consistent measurements via tidal gauges. many of the regional differences in tides are explained by amphridomic points.

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Bas Korsmit
Bas Korsmit - 19.09.2023 09:20

The music is very distracting and loud on headphones. Only saying this because otherwise this is a fantastic explanation! The animations make it so intuitive, appreciate all the work and I hope you make more. Thank you!

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pemoreland
pemoreland - 19.09.2023 08:48

While a good explanation of the "tidal forces" between objects, they are not strong enough to cause ocean tides. You have to account for centrifugal forces on Moon and Earth orbiting their center of mass. See Richard Feynman, Lectures on Physics, section 7-4.

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Godzooky
Godzooky - 19.09.2023 05:50

The background music is too loud and distracting. Informative video! Thank you for teaching me!

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Cheri Ann
Cheri Ann - 19.09.2023 04:24

I didn't expect to be so wonderstruck. Good Stuff!

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Rob Robinette
Rob Robinette - 19.09.2023 04:21

That's a great explanation, thank you.

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Edwin de Paula
Edwin de Paula - 19.09.2023 04:05

great video!

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Steve Drake
Steve Drake - 19.09.2023 00:57

Is the background music really necessary??

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Stefan Schnabel
Stefan Schnabel - 18.09.2023 23:19

"Really"? This is just another incomplete take on tides. Centrifugal forces play a relevant role here.

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knowledge inspector
knowledge inspector - 18.09.2023 22:42

Tide is not stretching nor squeezing it's about tilting.

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No Body
No Body - 18.09.2023 21:00

I call bs since there is no tide beyond 40 miles offshore. Because we don't comprehend our world we make stuff up and then treat theories as fact. If there were an oceanic bulge, the largest tidal fluctuations would be equatorial, but again. they are not.

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Adrian
Adrian - 18.09.2023 20:18

How do i turn off the music? it is a distraction.

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Betty Gilliland
Betty Gilliland - 18.09.2023 19:18

I watched this, and now I am much more confused than I was before. Only the last few minutes made sense to me. So I sent it to my son who teaches physics. He probably understands the whole thing. It's a good thing one of us does! Thanks for your presentation.

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TheXanUser
TheXanUser - 18.09.2023 19:08

I wonder how flat earthers must think the tides work?

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