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<blockquote data-quote="NaturalPhilosopher" data-source="post: 197394" data-attributes="member: 9562"><p>as steel rusts it loses physical strength. It's crumbly. As that happens the rusting metal tensioned spring will unwind as rust eats through it at one part of the spring. Then bam, it unwinds. Nothing rusts evenly. Even if were to rust evenly the new structure of the metal will fling off little particles of rust into the water with force. Remember, the metal atoms themselves are under tension. Not just the whole structure.</p><p></p><p>umm..the tides aren't caused by the inertia of the moon. They're caused by the gravitational attraction. Tides would happen if the moon flew by earth in a straight line, would pull the oceans along with it producing tides once.</p><p></p><p>what energy did the moon lose?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NaturalPhilosopher, post: 197394, member: 9562"] as steel rusts it loses physical strength. It's crumbly. As that happens the rusting metal tensioned spring will unwind as rust eats through it at one part of the spring. Then bam, it unwinds. Nothing rusts evenly. Even if were to rust evenly the new structure of the metal will fling off little particles of rust into the water with force. Remember, the metal atoms themselves are under tension. Not just the whole structure. umm..the tides aren't caused by the inertia of the moon. They're caused by the gravitational attraction. Tides would happen if the moon flew by earth in a straight line, would pull the oceans along with it producing tides once. what energy did the moon lose? [/QUOTE]
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