Tide-Producing Forces - Ocean tides are the result
of gravitational interactions between the earth, moon, and sun and the waters of
the earth. Earth’s gravity holds you and I and everything else on the earth’s
surface in a firm grip. Although it’s a very small force, lunar gravity also
acts on you and I and the earth itself. The reason we don’t “fall” straight into
the moon is that there is a separate force counteracting the lunar attractive
force. In the diagram at left, the lunar force is designated FM
and the offsetting force is the centrifugal force, FC,
produced by the revolution of the earth about its common center of gravity with
the moon. If the earth and moon were “twin planets” with equal size and mass,
the common center would be a point halfway between them but because the earth is
much larger and more massive than the moon, it’s actually a point lying just
inside the earth. 
As the image at left shows, we can regard the forces FM and FC to be in balance (FM = FC) for the earth as a whole and acting at a single point at the earth’s center. Similarly, as the earth orbits the sun it experiences solar attractive forces like those of the earth-moon system but of lesser magnitude in terms of the tractive forces discussed below.
Away from the earth’s center, the forces shown above are not in balance. Local differences in the magnitude and direction of FM and FC make up the “differential” or tide producing forces that vary across the earth’s surface. The centrifugal force, FC , is the same everywhere. However, the attractive force, FM , varies inversely as the square of the distance from the moon and always points toward the center of the moon. A person standing on the earth at the point closest to the moon would experience (but hardly feel!) a differential force of about 0.0000001g per unit of mass, acting toward the moon (FM >FC) compared with the normal 1g caused by earth’s gravity alone (force = mass times acceleration; ‘g’ is the acceleration of earth’s gravity, about 32 ft/sec per sec or 9.8 m/sec per sec).
One earth diameter farther away
on the opposite side of the earth from the moon, the differential force is about
0.0000001g per unit of mass, acting away from the moon (FC
>FM). How can forces so
small move huge volumes of water around and produce global tides? The answer
lies in the amount of mass and the force direction. Vertical forces in
particular are insignificant in comparison to earth’s gravity. Imagine trying to
lift a small car off the ground - earth’s gravity proves more than a match for
most of us and it’s even hard to push one slightly uphill! But on a level
roadway, it becomes a much easier task, particularly if several friends (more
mass) are helping to push. So, too, will the ocean volumes (lots of mass)
respond readily to the horizontal component of the differential force - the
tractive forces shown in red in the diagram below. We can think of these as
a net of forces – a force field – thrown over the globe and aligned with the
moon, trapping a spinning earth inside.