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6 - On the Secular Changes in the Elements of the Orbit of a Satellite revolving about a Tidally Distorted Planet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

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Summary

Introduction

The following paper treats of the effects of frictional tides in a planet on the orbit of its satellite. It is the sequel to three previous papers on a similar subject.

The investigation has proved to be one of unexpected complexity, and this must be my apology for the great length of the present paper. This was in part due to the fact that it was found impossible to consider adequately the changes in the orbit of the satellite, without a reconsideration of the parallel changes in the planet. Thus some of the ground covered in the previous paper on “Precession” had to be retraversed; but as the methods here employed are quite different from those used before, this repetition has not been without some advantage.

It will probably conduce to the intelligibility of what follows, if an explanatory outline of the contents of the paper is placed before the reader. Such an outline must of course contain references to future procedure, and cannot therefore be made entirely intelligible, yet it appears to me that some sort of preliminary notions of the nature of the subject will be advantageous, because it is sometimes difficult for a reader to retain the thread of the argument amidst the mass of details of a long investigation, which is leading him in some unknown direction.

Part VIII. contains a general review of the subject in its application to the evolution of the planets of the solar system.

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Chapter
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The Scientific Papers of Sir George Darwin
Tidal Friction and Cosmogony
, pp. 208 - 382
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1908

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