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The earth is pushing the moon faster
29.05.2013
Scientist Matthew Huber of Purdue University found that the Earth is pushing the Moon away from it faster than at any time in the last 50 million years. Due to the ebbs and flows, the satellite of our planet is moving further and further away from the Earth, which also affects the planet itself.
The moon's gravity creates a daily cycle of tides. This process slows down the rotation of the planet around its axis and causes the Moon to move away from the Earth by about 3,8 cm per year. It is logical to assume that if the rate of removal of the Moon has always been the same, then the age of the satellite can be calculated from the removal of the orbit of the Moon - it turns out about 1,5 billion years. However, this is clearly an incorrect figure, since some lunar rocks are much older - 4,5 billion years, which is comparable to the age of the Earth.
Matthew Huber and his colleagues studied the ocean floor and the contours of the continents that existed 50 million years ago. As a result, it was possible to create an accurate model of the ancient tides, and hence to calculate the gravitational interaction of the Moon and the Earth. It turned out that in ancient times the energy of this interaction was only half of the current one.
It turns out that the Moon is moving away from the Earth at an increasing speed, and so far the reason for this phenomenon is not fully understood. Perhaps the reason is that the North Atlantic Ocean is now much wider than it was 50 million years ago. Because of this, very large waves and high tides are formed, which push the moon harder.