Tidal locking (also called gravitational locking, captured rotation and spin-orbit locking), in the most well-known case, occurs when an orbiting astronomical body always has the same face toward the object it is orbiting. This is known as synchronous rotation:
the tidally locked body takes just as long to rotate around its own
axis as it does to revolve around its partner. For example, the same
side of the Moon always faces the Earth, although there is some variability because the Moon's orbit is not perfectly circular. Usually, only the satellite is tidally locked to the larger body.
However, if both the difference in mass between the two bodies and the
distance between them are relatively small, each may be tidally locked
to the other; this is the case for Pluto and Charon.
The effect arises between two bodies when their gravitational
interaction slows a body's rotation until it becomes tidally locked.
Over many millions of years, the interaction forces changes to their
orbits and rotation rates as a result of energy exchange and heat dissipation.
When one of the bodies reaches a state where there is no longer any net
change in its rotation rate over the course of a complete orbit, it is
said to be tidally locked.
The object tends to stay in this state when leaving it would require
adding energy back into the system. The object's orbit may migrate over
time so as to undo the tidal lock, for example, if a giant planet
perturbs the object.
Not every case of tidal locking involves synchronous rotation.
With Mercury, for example, this tidally locked planet completes three
rotations for every two revolutions around the Sun, a 3:2 spin-orbit
resonance. In the special case where an orbit is nearly circular and the
body's rotation axis is not significantly tilted, such as the Moon,
tidal locking results in the same hemisphere of the revolving object
constantly facing its partner.
However, in this case the exact same portion of the body does not always
face the partner on all orbits. There can be some shifting due to variations in the locked body's orbital velocity and the inclination of its rotation axis.
Mechanism
Consider a pair of co-orbiting objects, A and B. The change in rotation rate necessary to tidally lock body B to the larger body A is caused by the torque applied by A's gravity on bulges it has induced on B by tidal forces.
The gravitational force from object A upon B will vary with
distance, being greatest at the nearest surface to A and least at the
most distant. This creates a gravitational gradient across object B that will distort its equilibrium
shape slightly. The body of object B will become elongated along the
axis oriented toward A, and conversely, slightly reduced in dimension in
directions orthogonal
to this axis. The elongated distortions are known as tidal bulges. (For
the solid Earth, these bulges can reach displacements of up to around
0.4 metres (1.3 ft).)
When B is not yet tidally locked, the bulges travel over its surface
due to orbital motions, with one of the two "high" tidal bulges
traveling close to the point where body A is overhead. For large
astronomical bodies that are nearly spherical due to self-gravitation, the tidal distortion produces a slightly prolate spheroid, i.e. an axially symmetric ellipsoid that is elongated along its major axis. Smaller bodies also experience distortion, but this distortion is less regular.
The material of B exerts resistance to this periodic reshaping
caused by the tidal force. In effect, some time is required to reshape B
to the gravitational equilibrium shape, by which time the forming
bulges have already been carried some distance away from the A–B axis by
B's rotation. Seen from a vantage point in space, the points of maximum
bulge extension are displaced from the axis oriented toward A. If B's
rotation period is shorter than its orbital period, the bulges are
carried forward of the axis oriented toward A in the direction of
rotation, whereas if B's rotation period is longer, the bulges instead
lag behind.
Because the bulges are now displaced from the A–B axis, A's
gravitational pull on the mass in them exerts a torque on B. The torque
on the A-facing bulge acts to bring B's rotation in line with its
orbital period, whereas the "back" bulge, which faces away from A, acts
in the opposite sense. However, the bulge on the A-facing side is closer
to A than the back bulge by a distance of approximately B's diameter,
and so experiences a slightly stronger gravitational force and torque.
The net resulting torque from both bulges, then, is always in the
direction that acts to synchronize B's rotation with its orbital period,
leading eventually to tidal locking.
Orbital changes
The angular momentum of the whole A–B system is conserved in this process, so that when B slows down and loses rotational angular momentum, its orbital
angular momentum is boosted by a similar amount (there are also some
smaller effects on A's rotation). This results in a raising of B's orbit
about A in tandem with its rotational slowdown. For the other case
where B starts off rotating too slowly, tidal locking both speeds up its
rotation, and lowers its orbit.
Locking of the larger body
The tidal locking effect is also experienced by the larger body A,
but at a slower rate because B's gravitational effect is weaker due to
B's smaller mass. For example, Earth's rotation is gradually being
slowed by the Moon, by an amount that becomes noticeable over geological
time as revealed in the fossil record.
Current estimations are that this (together with the tidal influence of
the Sun) has helped lengthen the Earth day from about 6 hours to the
current 24 hours (over ≈ 4½ billion years). Currently, atomic clocks show that Earth's day lengthens, on average, by about 15 microseconds every year. Given enough time, this would create a mutual tidal locking between Earth and the Moon. The length of the Earth's day would increase and the length of a lunar month would also increase. The Earth's sidereal day would eventually have the same length as the Moon's orbital period,
about 47 times the length of the Earth's day at present. However, Earth
is not expected to become tidally locked to the Moon before the Sun
becomes a red giant and engulfs Earth and the Moon.
For bodies of similar size the effect may be of comparable size
for both, and both may become tidally locked to each other on a much
shorter timescale. An example is the dwarf planet Pluto and its satellite Charon. They have already reached a state where Charon is visible from only one hemisphere of Pluto and vice versa.
Eccentric orbits
A widely spread misapprehension is that a tidally locked body permanently turns one side to its host.
— Heller et al. (2011)
For orbits that do not have an eccentricity close to zero, the rotation rate tends to become locked with the orbital speed when the body is at periapsis,
which is the point of strongest tidal interaction between the two
objects. If the orbiting object has a companion, this third body can
cause the rotation rate of the parent object to vary in an oscillatory
manner. This interaction can also drive an increase in orbital
eccentricity of the orbiting object around the primary – an effect known
as eccentricity pumping.
In some cases where the orbit is eccentric and the tidal effect is relatively weak, the smaller body may end up in a so-called spin–orbit resonance,
rather than being tidally locked. Here, the ratio of the rotation
period of a body to its own orbital period is some simple fraction
different from 1:1. A well known case is the rotation of Mercury, which is locked to its own orbit around the Sun in a 3:2 resonance.
Many exoplanets (especially the close-in ones) are expected to be
in spin–orbit resonances higher than 1:1. A Mercury-like terrestrial
planet can, for example, become captured in a 3:2, 2:1, or 5:2
spin–orbit resonance, with the probability of each being dependent on
the orbital eccentricity.
Occurrence
Moons
Most major moons in the Solar System − the gravitationally rounded satellites − are tidally locked with their primaries, because they orbit very closely and tidal force increases rapidly (as a cubic function) with decreasing distance. Notable exceptions are the irregular outer satellites of the gas giants, which orbit much farther away than the large well-known moons.
Pluto and Charon
are an extreme example of a tidal lock. Charon is a relatively large
moon in comparison to its primary and also has a very close orbit. This results in Pluto and Charon being mutually tidally locked. Pluto's other moons are not tidally locked; Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra all rotate chaotically due to the influence of Charon.
The tidal locking situation for asteroid moons is largely unknown, but closely orbiting binaries are expected to be tidally locked, as well as contact binaries.
Earth's Moon
Earth's Moon's rotation and orbital periods are tidally locked with
each other, so no matter when the Moon is observed from Earth the same
hemisphere of the Moon is always seen. The far side of the Moon was not seen until 1959, when photographs of most of the far side were transmitted from the Soviet spacecraft Luna 3.
When the Earth is observed from the moon, the Earth does not
appear to translate across the sky but appears to remain in the same
place, rotating on its own axis.
Despite the Moon's rotational and orbital periods being exactly
locked, about 59% of the Moon's total surface may be seen with repeated
observations from Earth due to the phenomena of libration and parallax. Librations are primarily caused by the Moon's varying orbital speed due to the eccentricity
of its orbit: this allows up to about 6° more along its perimeter to be
seen from Earth. Parallax is a geometric effect: at the surface of
Earth we are offset from the line through the centers of Earth and Moon,
and because of this we can observe a bit (about 1°) more around the
side of the Moon when it is on our local horizon.
Planets
It was thought for some time that Mercury
was in synchronous rotation with the Sun. This was because whenever
Mercury was best placed for observation, the same side faced inward.
Radar observations in 1965 demonstrated instead that Mercury has a 3:2
spin–orbit resonance, rotating three times for every two revolutions
around the Sun, which results in the same positioning at those
observation points. Modeling has demonstrated that Mercury was captured
into the 3:2 spin–orbit state very early in its history, within 20 (and
more likely even 10) million years after its formation.
Venus's
583.92-day interval between successive close approaches to Earth is
equal to 5.001444 Venusian solar days, making approximately the same
face visible from Earth at each close approach. Whether this
relationship arose by chance or is the result of some kind of tidal
locking with Earth is unknown.
Proxima Centauri b, the "Earth-like planet" discovered in 2016 that orbits around the star Proxima Centauri is tidally locked, either in synchronized rotation, or otherwise expresses a 3:2 spin–orbit resonance like that of Mercury.
One form of hypothetical tidal locked exoplanets are eyeball planets, that in turn are divided into "hot" and "cold" eyeball planets.
Stars
Close binary stars throughout the universe are expected to be tidally locked with each other, and extrasolar planets
that have been found to orbit their primaries extremely closely are
also thought to be tidally locked to them. An unusual example, confirmed
by MOST, may be Tau Boötis, a star that is probably tidally locked by its planet Tau Boötis b. If so, the tidal locking is almost certainly mutual.
However, since stars are gaseous bodies that can rotate with a
different rate at different latitudes, the tidal lock is with Tau
Boötis's magnetic field.
Timescale
An estimate of the time for a body to become tidally locked can be obtained using the following formula:
where
- is the initial spin rate expressed in radians per second,
- is the semi-major axis of the motion of the satellite around the planet (given by the average of the periapsis and apoapsis distances),
- is the moment of inertia of the satellite, where is the mass of the satellite and is the mean radius of the satellite,
- is the dissipation function of the satellite,
- is the gravitational constant,
- is the mass of the planet, and
- is the tidal Love number of the satellite.
and are generally very poorly known except for the Moon, which has . For a really rough estimate it is common to take (perhaps conservatively, giving overestimated locking times), and
where
- is the density of the satellite
- is the surface gravity of the satellite
- is the rigidity of the satellite. This can be roughly taken as 3×1010 N·m−2 for rocky objects and 4×109 N·m−2 for icy ones.
Even knowing the size and density of the satellite leaves many parameters that must be estimated (especially ω, Q, and μ),
so that any calculated locking times obtained are expected to be
inaccurate, even to factors of ten. Further, during the tidal locking
phase the semi-major axis may have been significantly different from that observed nowadays due to subsequent tidal acceleration, and the locking time is extremely sensitive to this value.
Because the uncertainty is so high, the above formulas can be
simplified to give a somewhat less cumbersome one. By assuming that the
satellite is spherical, ,
and it is sensible to guess one revolution every 12 hours in the
initial non-locked state (most asteroids have rotational periods between
about 2 hours and about 2 days)
with masses in kilograms, distances in meters, and in newtons per meter squared; can be roughly taken as 3×1010 N·m−2 for rocky objects and 4×109 N·m−2 for icy ones.
There is an extremely strong dependence on semi-major axis .
For the locking of a primary body to its satellite as in the case
of Pluto, the satellite and primary body parameters can be swapped.
One conclusion is that, other things being equal (such as and ), a large moon will lock faster than a smaller moon at the same orbital distance from the planet because grows as the cube of the satellite radius . A possible example of this is in the Saturn system, where Hyperion is not tidally locked, whereas the larger Iapetus,
which orbits at a greater distance, is. However, this is not clear cut
because Hyperion also experiences strong driving from the nearby Titan, which forces its rotation to be chaotic.
The above formulae for the timescale of locking may be off by
orders of magnitude, because they ignore the frequency dependence of .
More importantly, they may be inapplicable to viscous binaries (double
stars, or double asteroids that are rubble), because the spin–orbit
dynamics of such bodies is defined mainly by their viscosity, not
rigidity.
List of known tidally locked bodies
Solar System
Parent body | Tidally-locked satellites |
---|---|
Sun | Mercury (3:2 spin–orbit resonance) |
Earth | Moon |
Mars | Phobos · Deimos |
Jupiter | Metis · Adrastea · Amalthea · Thebe · Io · Europa · Ganymede · Callisto |
Saturn | Pan · Atlas · Prometheus · Pandora · Epimetheus · Janus · Mimas · Enceladus · Telesto · Tethys · Calypso · Dione · Rhea · Titan · Iapetus |
Uranus | Miranda · Ariel · Umbriel · Titania · Oberon |
Neptune | Proteus · Triton |
Pluto | Charon (Pluto is itself locked to Charon) |
Extra-solar
- The most successful detection methods of exoplanets (transits and radial velocities) suffer from a clear observational bias favoring the detection of planets near the star; thus, 85% of the exoplanets detected are inside the tidal locking zone, which makes it difficult to estimate the true incidence of this phenomenon. Tau Boötis is known to be locked to the close-orbiting giant planet Tau Boötis b.
Bodies likely to be locked
Solar System
Based
on comparison between the likely time needed to lock a body to its
primary, and the time it has been in its present orbit (comparable with
the age of the Solar System for most planetary moons), a number of moons
are thought to be locked. However their rotations are not known or not
known enough. These are:
Probably locked to Saturn
Probably locked to Uranus
Probably locked to Neptune
Extrasolar
- Gliese 581c, Gliese 581g, Gliese 581b, and Gliese 581e may be tidally locked to their parent star Gliese 581. Gliese 581d is almost certainly captured either into the 2:1 or the 3:2 spin–orbit resonance with the same star.
- All planets in the TRAPPIST-1 system are likely to be tidally locked.