Le Lien Gravitationnel Terre-Lune à Travers les Ages

1972 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 479-485
Author(s):  
Jean-Maurice Chevallier ◽  
André Cailleux

The authors expressed the view in 1952 that tidal friction between the earth and moon could account for many features such as alterations in biological rhythms, or tectonic effects of unequalled amplitude throughout geological times and the remote past. Tests for this theory are: (a) It is remarkable that the loss of angular momentum by the earth since the "original" state almost exactly matches the amount required to bring the moon from the earth's equator to its present orbit; (b) Recent observations of daily growth increments in fossil organisms show, at least for the last 400 m.y., that the order of magnitude of the time-scale previously adopted by the authors is satisfactory, the scale having only to be somewhat shortened and the values—theoretical and observed—of the month-to-day ratio are in good concordance.

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (S345) ◽  
pp. 148-151
Author(s):  
Sergei I. Ipatov

AbstractTrans-Neptunian satellite systems and embryos of the Earth-Moon system could be formed as a result of contraction of rarefied condensations. The angular momenta of rarefied condensations needed for such formation could be acquired at collisions of condensations. The angular momentum of the present Earth-Moon system could be acquired at a collision of two rarefied condensations with a total mass not smaller than 0.1ME, where ME is the mass of the Earth. The mass of the condensation that was a parent for the embryos of the Earth and the Moon could be about 0.01ME, if we take into account the growth of the angular momentum of the embryos with growth of their masses. The Moon embryo could get by an order of magnitude more material ejected from the Earth embryo than that fell directly onto the Moon embryo.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (90) ◽  
pp. 482-482
Author(s):  
C. S. M. Doake

Plastic deformation of ice shelves in the region along the grounding line where they bend with the tide can dissipate enough tidal energy to make them the most important single source contribution to tidal friction (Doake, 1978). Some of the effects are to slow the rotation of the Earth and to cause the moon to retreat from the Earth.


Author(s):  
J. Salmon ◽  
R. M Canup

Impacts that leave the Earth–Moon system with a large excess in angular momentum have recently been advocated as a means of generating a protolunar disc with a composition that is nearly identical to that of the Earth's mantle. We here investigate the accretion of the Moon from discs generated by such ‘non-canonical’ impacts, which are typically more compact than discs produced by canonical impacts and have a higher fraction of their mass initially located inside the Roche limit. Our model predicts a similar overall accretional history for both canonical and non-canonical discs, with the Moon forming in three consecutive steps over hundreds of years. However, we find that, to yield a lunar-mass Moon, the more compact non-canonical discs must initially be more massive than implied by prior estimates, and only a few of the discs produced by impact simulations to date appear to meet this condition. Non-canonical impacts require that capture of the Moon into the evection resonance with the Sun reduced the Earth–Moon angular momentum by a factor of 2 or more. We find that the Moon's semi-major axis at the end of its accretion is approximately 7 R ⊕ , which is comparable to the location of the evection resonance for a post-impact Earth with a 2.5 h rotation period in the absence of a disc. Thus, the dynamics of the Moon's assembly may directly affect its ability to be captured into the resonance.


2015 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Reuver ◽  
R.J. de Meijer ◽  
I.L. ten Kate ◽  
W. van Westrenen

AbstractRecent measurements of the chemical and isotopic composition of lunar samples indicate that the Moon's bulk composition shows great similarities with the composition of the silicate Earth. Moon formation models that attempt to explain these similarities make a wide variety of assumptions about the properties of the Earth prior to the formation of the Moon (the proto-Earth), and about the necessity and properties of an impactor colliding with the proto-Earth. This paper investigates the effects of the proto-Earth's mass, oblateness and internal core-mantle differentiation on its moment of inertia. The ratio of angular momentum and moment of inertia determines the stability of the proto-Earth and the binding energy, i.e. the energy needed to make the transition from an initial state in which the system is a rotating single body with a certain angular momentum to a final state with two bodies (Earth and Moon) with the same total angular momentum, redistributed between Earth and Moon. For the initial state two scenarios are being investigated: a homogeneous (undifferentiated) proto-Earth and a proto-Earth differentiated in a central metallic and an outer silicate shell; for both scenarios a range of oblateness values is investigated. Calculations indicate that a differentiated proto-Earth would become unstable at an angular momentum L that exceeds the total angular momentum of the present-day Earth–Moon system (L0) by factors of 2.5–2.9, with the precise maximum dependent on the proto-Earth's oblateness. Further limitations are imposed by the Roche limit and the logical condition that the separated Earth–Moon system should be formed outside the proto-Earth. This further limits the L values of the Earth–Moon system to a maximum of about L/L0 = 1.5, at a minimum oblateness (a/c ratio) of 1.2. These calculations provide boundary conditions for the main classes of Moon-forming models. Our results show that at the high values of L used in recent giant impact models (1.8 < L/L0 < 3.1), the proposed proto-Earths are unstable before (Cuk & Stewart, 2012) or immediately after (Canup, 2012) the impact, even at a high oblateness (the most favourable condition for stability). We conclude that the recent attempts to improve the classic giant impact hypothesis by studying systems with very high values of L are not supported by the boundary condition calculations in this work. In contrast, this work indicates that the nuclear explosion model for Moon formation (De Meijer et al., 2013) fulfills the boundary conditions and requires approximately one order of magnitude less energy than originally estimated. Hence in our view the nuclear explosion model is presently the model that best explains the formation of the Moon from predominantly terrestrial silicate material.


1972 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 402-404
Author(s):  
E. L. Ruskol

According to the Radzievskij-Artemjev hypothesis of the ‘locked’ revolution of the circumplanetary swarms around the Sun, the initial Moon-to-Earth distance and the angular momentum acquired by the Earth through the accretion of the inner part of the swarm can be evaluated. Depending on the concentration of the density to the centre of the swarm we obtain the initial distance for a single protomoon in the range 15–26 Earth radii R and for a system of 3-4 protomoons in the range 3–78 R, if the outer boundary of the swarm equals to the radius of the Hill's sphere (235 R). The total angular momentum acquired by the primitive Earth-Moon system through the accretion of the swarm particles is ½–⅔ of its present value. The rest of it should be acquired from the direct accretion of interplanetary particles by the Earth. The contribution of satellite swarms into the rotation of other planets is relatively less.


1962 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 259-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Bonev

The Moon craters grew out of Moon volcanism in the remote past. N. A. Kozyrev observed a volcanic eruption at the beginning of November 1958. In the remote past this activity was probably much more intense. The distribution of the craters over the eastern and the western halves of the Moon disk does not support the meteoritic hypothesis of the origin of the Moon craters. We ascertained this in 1955 and 1956 by means of some theorems from the field of continued probabilities bearing on the hemisphere and on the polygon†. The eastern hemisphere of the Moon is continually undergoing a meteoritic bombardment to an even greater degree than the western one, yet no adequate effect is to be observed. It is true that nowadays the orbital velocity of the Moon about the Earth is slow in respect to the annual motion of the Earth about the Sun. However, according to the theory of probability, the slight advantage of the eastern over the western hemisphere would certainly have become apparent after a sufficiently large number (say several hundreds of millions) of years.


1962 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 3-6
Author(s):  
A. A. Mikhailov

During the entire time of Earth's existence the human eye has never seen the reverse side of the Moon. It is quite probable that, initially, the Moon had an axial rotation relative to the Earth, but tidal friction slowed this rotation down to such an extent that the Moon remained forever with one side turned towards the Earth.


1972 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 160-161
Author(s):  
R. R. Newton

The purpose of this work is to investigate changes in the rotation of the Earth in the past few thousand years. Since most available observations involve the Moon, study of the Earth's rotation is inseparable from study of the Moon's motion. Since it is doubtful that present theories of tidal friction account for the present acceleration (Spencer Jones, 1939; Van Flandern, 1970; Pariisky et al., 1972) of the Moon, we cannot safely assume that consequence of the theories which says that tidal friction has been almost constant.


Modern computers enable us to obtain realistic values for the present tidal torque between the Moon and the oceans; those values agree with the observations. In principle, computations for distant geological epochs are possible as well and have been performed. However, the very complex eigenperiod spectrum of the oceans today precludes a continuous reconstruction of the tidal torque for an essential part of the Earth’s history. Hence the original state of the Earth-Moon system is still uncertain. We emphasize the importance of results for intermediate timescales.


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