Posted by wglb 1 day ago
Second ‘impossible’ ring found around distant dwarf planet - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35762112 - April 2023 (61 comments)
Ring discovered around dwarf planet Quaoar confounds theories - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34714024 - Feb 2023 (1 comment)
I don’t mean that I find the Bernoulli explanation non-sensical — that’s a very common thing these days — more that the experience of listening to the falsehood presented as truth by so many people now means I am suspicious of other non-intuitive explanations.
In this specific case, I can’t get a good intuition about how tidal forces explain (1) Earth’s moon causing ocean bulges on both sides of Earth; and (2) tidal friction making Earth’s moon stop spinning and move further away. I feel like it’s one of those phenomena, like aerofoil lift, whose explanation is glossed over far too quickly given how odd the explanation is.
That's not really a thing, and tides are way more complicated than that. For example, at any given moment, part of New Zealand's coast is at high tide, and part is at low tide. Same with the coasts around the North Sea, and the Atlantic coast of Patagonia, and Hudson Bay.
Animation of today's tides: https://www.tpxo.net/
Some good tide explanation: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/121830/does-earth..., discussed three months ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44065458
So everything is pulled towards the moon, but the more distant parts are pulled less, and the sides are pulled inwards, so the resultant shape is the familiar ellipsoid
[1] http://nicholasbsullivan.com/page_oceanography/Meeting6/01_t...
As for the Bernoulli explanation for lift.. try holding a sheet of paper in front of you, it's not solid so it'll bow down, with a nice wing-shaped form. Then blow gently over it, see what happens.
This is an amateur’s explanation and I’d welcome input from someone with more understanding. For tidal friction, I can’t answer at all, I need to research.
If it is an asteroid belt, maybe it is on a different (high inclination) plane, which is why the star only hit one part of it.