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- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ncar!noao!sunspot!bbbehr
- From: bbbehr@sunspot.noao.edu (Bradford B. Behr)
- Subject: Re: ROTATION OF THE MOON
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.185734.15773@sunspot.noao.edu>
- Organization: National Solar Observatory/SP, Sunspot NM, USA
- References: <1992Nov18.163804.1213@sunspot.noao.edu> <1992Nov19.144441.5498@col.hp.com>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 92 18:57:34 GMT
- Lines: 41
-
- >> The same thing is happening, much more slowly, to the earth --
- >> friction with the tides and within the "solid" earth is slowing the
- >> rotation rate by something on the order of 1 sec every century. We can
- >> actually measure it (the slowdown) nowadays. Love those atomic clocks!
- >
- >Do you know if that rate is constant? Say around 63M years ago,
- >around the time of the end of the dinosaurs, the day would have
- >been 175 hrs longer!
-
- If the rotation rate is slowing down, then in the past it would have
- been faster, and the day would have been shorter, not longer. (I would
- guess that your mind thought "shorter" and your fingers typed
- "longer".)
-
- Anyway...
-
- I would suspect that the rate of energy loss would depend on the
- rotation rate, so the rotation rate would drop off exponentially, or
- at least in an asymptotic fashion. Which would mean that 63M years
- ago, the day would have been _at least_ 175 hrs _shorter_, and
- probably much more.
-
- Hmmm... something fishy there. 24 hrs minus 175 hrs is.... yeah.
-
- OK, so it looks like my 1 sec/century value was incorrect. That'll
- teach me to post dimly remembered facts to the net. ("Always... no,
- no, _Never_ forget to check your references." -- _Real Genius_, a
- great flick). Regardless, I'm going to do it again. I remember
- reading somewhere once that the terran day was once 10 hours. If
- anybody out there would like to verify or trash this figure, with a
- valid reference, I'd be most appreciative.
-
- Thanks,
- Brad
-
- "c = 2.99... no, 55 mph. Yeah! That's the ticket!"
- --
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Bradford B. Behr bbbehr@sunspot.sunspot.noao.edu
- Sacramento Peak National Solar Observatory, Sunspot NM 88349
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-