NotSamHarris
New member
To young earth creationists: What sort of things would make you question your belief of the age of the earth? What kind of things would you expect to see on a very old earth?
...unless they are built out of accepted assumptions. If you build a model for a proposed physical system using accepted physical limits and conditions then the model does become evidence. So you could tell us which part of Dr. Brown's model is in error then you would actually be contributing to the discussion. Instead you seem to be relying solely upon your ability to divide and your make believe debate with an unheard of creationist.Models are not evidence.
And when we do the math, we get billions of years.
Barbarian chuckles: Let's leave it at 4.0 cm/year, just to give you the benefit of a doubt and to ease calculation. The Roche Limit (distance from the Earth at which the moon would break up from gravitational forces) is about 9,500 km. The moon is presently about 384,000 km away. So, the present rate of recession (which as I said, changes over geologic time) would suggest 9.6 billion years to reach it's present place from the Roche limit. Pick a different distance, and I'll calculate the time for you as well. And then we can see what the tides were at that time. Not bad for doing it in my head. The actual calculated value is...9,362,500,000 years. Well, you could do the math yourself. But if you don't know how, I'll do it for you: 384,000 km - 9,500km = 374,500 km. Or about 37,450,000,000 cm. Divide by 4 cm/year, you get 9,362,500,000 years since the moon would have been at the Roche limit.
When have I ever called you an atheist?Well, at least you aren't calling me an atheist this time.
The ocean bulge is pulled in front of the moon by Earth's spin; since the ocean is gravitationally stuck to the Earth, it has to go where the Earth goes. But it can't go too far, because it is pulled back by the moon. The result, illustrated in figure 3, is that the ocean bulge is in equilibrium, remaining essentially fixed with respect to the Earth and moon, while the solid Earth spins under the ocean. The ocean is gravitationally bound to the Earth, but it is still fluid, and not stuck to the Earth the way a rock or a mountain is. There is an interface, namely the ocean bottom, where the water and the Earth are free to move with respect to each other. That interface, like any other real physical interface, is not totally frictionless, and that too is illustrated in figure 3 by the small caption that reads "Friction force". But in this case, "friction" includes all of the ways that the ocean and the Earth impede each other. The ocean runs into the continents and has to wash around them (so how they are distributed around the Earth makes a difference).
Since the Earth is trying to spin forward, but the ocean is held back by the moon, the Earth winds up trying to move through the oceans. Just as you can feel the resistance if you try to walk through water, so the Earth feels the resistance trying to move through the water of the oceans, and that resistance transfers energy from the Earth (causing its spin rate to slow), and to the oceans (sloshing them around and heating them up).
Worried that someone else came to something like 1.2 billion years without including certain assumptions, Barbie?Later researchers came to the conclusion that Jeffreys had rather severely underestimated the true numerical value for oceanic tidal dissipation, and had therefore overestimated the age of the Earth-moon system. Although they do not offer an age, Munk & McDonald (1960) said that Jeffreys had the oceanic dissipation wrong by a factor of 100. It soon became apparent that the pendulum had swung the other way, and that there was a fundamental problem. Slichter (1963) reanalyzed the Earth-moon torque by devising a new way to use the entire ellipsoid of Earth rather than treating it as a series of approximations. He decided that, depending on the specifics of the model, the moon would have started out very close to Earth anywhere from 1.4 billion to 2.3 billion years ago, rather than 4.5 billion years ago. Slichter remarked that if "for some unknown reason" the tidal torque was much less in the past than in the present (where "present" means roughly the last 100 million years), this would solve the problem. But he could not supply the reason, and concluded his paper by saying that the time scale of the Earth-moon system "still presents a major problem"; I call this "Slichter's dilemma".
...which is what I was talking about. In order to reject the model and evidence I linked to one is forced to assume rather dramatic alterations to the Earth.The years that followed saw the rise of plate tectonics and a major shift in geophysical thinking because of it. The mobility of the drifting continents is a matter of major import, for by this time it was well realized that tidal dissipation in shallow seas dominated the interaction between Earth and the moon.
Stripe. You do realize that TO is onto the same point im making? It just gives false mechanics to the situation. The tidal bulge does work against the earths rotation but the energy transfer is instantaneous and ends up slowding down the earth.
...unless they are built out of accepted assumptions.
If you build a model for a proposed physical system using accepted physical limits and conditions then the model does become evidence. So you could tell us which part of Dr. Brown's model is in error then you would actually be contributing to the discussion. Instead you seem to be relying solely upon your ability to divide and your make believe debate with an unheard of creationist.
But you need a lot more than that.
1.2 billion years.
You should quit pretending you can do this stuff in your head.
Talk Origins is junk on this issue.
This is all utter fluff. The Earth cannot slow down because of friction on the floor of the ocean any more than it slows down because of friction at any other given surface layer.
There is nothing special about the Earth's oceans that will affect the model I provided.
When TO says, "The ocean is gravitationally bound to the Earth, but it is still fluid, and not stuck to the Earth the way a rock or a mountain is" they are raising an unnecessary complication.
A mountain on the Earth is attracted by the moon. That attraction provides the mountain with energy to move against the spin of the Earth. This energy provided is the same as is provided to the same mass of ocean water. The rest of the Earth then has to overcome that friction created. It will require the same amount of energy for the earth to overcome the mountain's friction as it will to overcome the friction from the same mass of ocean water.
Even with two rocky bodies orbiting each other we would see the same physical process in action. But the bulges created would be very tiny and thus the recession rates very small.
Now, I'm not sure what you are arguing here. You seem to be trying to paint this model I provided as wrong. It's not.
Fact is that the physics dictate moon recession had to be faster in the past. But you insist it was slower.
I think I'll stick with the physics thanks.
Nope. You can't "accept" your assumptions, and then call them evidence. Sorry.
I don't think I used any insults. Could you point them out to me?I don't think generic insults will help you, Stipe.
That's a maximum age, Barbie. Try to keep up. :up:The fact is, 1.2 billion is more than enough to destroy the YE "model."
You continue on as if you're providing some kind of useful analysis. Multiplying out at the current recession rate is an all but useless calculation.Well, it was a small multiplication error. Perhaps you don't know that a kilometer has 100,000 centimeters. I assumed you knew.
TO is just plain fluff. The ocean is the Earth for all intents and purposes. Just as any mountain or rock is. The only thing that is of any relevance is the mass displacement.It can, and does. Friction takes kinetic energy and converts it to heat and other forms of energy. That reduced kinetic energy slows the Earth. That's how it works, Stipe.
You have posted nothing that even indicates you've read the page I linked to so I think we can safely ignore your assessment.Nothing in the real world will affect your model.
Uh huh. And it matters not one iota what friction is going on in those tides. All that matters is the amount of mass that is displaced.It is the tides that slow the Earth and cause the moon's recession.
Something has to move to cause "friction."
Because of the mass displaced. Not because of any friction.But with oceans that are both fluid and substantial, the recession rates are significant.
Try reading the link I provided. :thumb:Of course the Earth isn't 9 billion years old. What I'm showing you, is that your model, if actually applied to the real world, would give you over 9 billion years.
No, it doesn't.That's what the evidence shows, Stipe.
When you find someone who says this then you can tell them off for doing so.
You continue on as if you're providing some kind of useful analysis. Multiplying out at the current recession rate is an all but useless calculation.
That's a maximum age, Barbie.
Try to keep up.
You continue on as if you're providing some kind of useful analysis. Multiplying out at the current recession rate is an all but useless calculation.
TO is just plain fluff. The ocean is the Earth for all intents and purposes. Just as any mountain or rock is. The only thing that is of any relevance is the mass displacement.
You can't look at friction between the ocean and the seafloor as an influence any more than you can look at friction between a mountain and the earth's crust as an influence.
Uh huh. And it matters not one iota what friction is going on in those tides. All that matters is the amount of mass that is displaced.
Force has to be applied to cause friction.
And your implication is wrong. Mountains and rocks do move in response to tidal factors. How do you think we generate earthquakes?
No, it doesn't.
(Barbarian corrects Stipe)
Models are not evidence. Stipe disagrees: ...unless they are built out of accepted assumptions. Barbarian chuckles: Nope. You can't "accept" your assumptions, and then call them evidence. Sorry. Just did, Stiipe. Did you forget what you wrote?
How about you read the link I posted?How fast do you think it was, Stipe. And show us your evidence and numbers?
Uh .. are you nuts? There is no way you could use geology to provide evidence for this. Perhaps you could interpret geology according to the model you've employed, but the physics dictate reality here.Oh, and it has to be consistent with the geological evidence.
I think you need to think this through a bit more carefully, Barbie. 1.2 billion years is a maximum age derived from a valid physical model of the earth-moon system. Your multiplication ability shows your multiplication ability.One-thousandth of that age is enough to destroy the YE "model." You telling us that recession was a thousand times faster in the past, and then suddenly slowed down by Roman times when people were watching? It puts an order of magnitude on the problem. And it shows that no possible rate of recession could be consistent with YE creationism.
If you are standing on a yacht and blow into the sail, are you aiding forward momentum?It can, and does. Friction takes kinetic energy and converts it to heat and other forms of energy. That reduced kinetic energy slows the Earth. That's how it works, Stipe.
Dr. Walt Brown is an engineer. He knows how things work too. And your qualifications are?Tim Thompson is an astrophyscist. He actually knows how it works. And your qualifications are...?
Your car will fall over with enough speed in a corner because of the mass that is displaced and gravity. To talk about friction in this "accidental experiment" would be meaningless.Actually, you can. Here's an experiment someone accidentally tried: Put a water bed in a Volkswagen microbus. Then go take some corners. Let me know how it turns out.
Your straw man is wrong. There is friction at work on and in the earth. But that friction has nothing to do with slowing the rotation of the earth. In the same way as friction is involved in the "accidental experiment". Friction is at work, but it is not the reason the V-Dub falls over.Sorry, that's wrong. If there was no frictional force between the Earth and it's oceans, the Earth would simply rotate under the tidal bulge and no energy would be transferred at all.
Yes, it does.Convection currents in the Earth's mantle. You didn't know that? You think the Moon causes Earthquakes? Seriously, Stipe? :chuckle:
At this point, you need some evidence.
And supposing the moon causes earthquakes is moving in the wrong direction.
No, I knew what I had written. Models can be used as evidence. You are trying to accuse me of using an assumption as evidence.
That's what scientists do, Barbie.
How about you read the link I posted?
Uh .. are you nuts? There is no way you could use geology to provide evidence for this.
Perhaps you could interpret geology according to the model you've employed, but the physics dictate reality here.
I think you need to think this through a bit more carefully, Barbie.
1.2 billion years is a maximum age derived from a valid physical model of the earth-moon system.
If you are standing on a yacht and blow into the sail, are you aiding forward momentum?
Tim Thompson is an astrophysicist. He actually knows how it works. And your qualifications are...?
Dr. Walt Brown is an engineer.
He knows how things work too.
And your qualifications are?
Your car will fall over with enough speed in a corner
Your straw man is wrong.
There is friction at work on and in the earth. But that friction has nothing to do with slowing the rotation of the earth.
Yes, it does.
You think rock can convect?
Seriously Barbie?
You should go and read it.
Yeah, that's a very interesting tangent. Feel free to stay on topic though.
I f the tidal bulge were not displaced, it would still create friction as it washed around the shores of continents. This would not slow down the rotation. It would simply dissipate in heat.
Barbarian asks from what energy would the heat come from that was produced. The heat comes from friction of waves crashing against the shore.
The waves are caused by the tidal bulge.
Have we figured out how old the earth is yet?