Gee Duyz, youve gone to so much effort, I do appreciate it. Im still stumped on this. I do have good knowledge of basic astrophysics, and I do mean basic.
Are these your own concepts or can you quote a source/website? Ive researched this problem before, and I never came across this concept.
heres a few points I need clarified;
"3. The Earth surface closest to the moon is also attracted [but not so strongly as the water] so it too moves slightly closer. Since the Earth is solid it all moves."
- surely you are not suggesting the moon pulls the earth off course? Your diagram seems to be saying so. The earth does not move, except around the sun. Orbit is the net result of 2 forces, and the earths gravitation is stronger than the moons. Isnt the distance between the earth and moon CONSTANT? ie Geostationary orbit....The moon does NOT pull the earth towards it resulting in a suction effect. The earth exerts a gravity force on the moon that stops the moon spinning off into hyperspace. There is a big difference.
"a) the Earth's axis is tilted around 23.5 degrees (tides are bigger around 23.5 degrees from the Equator) "
- surely the earth is only tilted at the solstice in winter and summer? In Spring and Autumn we get the equinox, and no tilt? We still get 2 tides a day.
If the moon was causing the earth to move, then we would never have been able to navigate by stars, everything in the sky would be moving. Do I understand you correctly? Im not trying to have a go at you. If you can explain this to me , I will be very grateful. As you can tell, I enjoy physics, and Ive been trying to understand this problem for years.
regards
Andrew