WP3: Tides and evolution of the Earth-Moon system
In 2022 ,we have fulfilled the objectives of WP3 beyond all expectations. We have provided the first coherent model for the tidal evolution of the Earth-Moon system since its formation (Farhat, Auclair-Desrotour, Boué, Laskar, 2022).
Since the work of Georges Darwin, 1880, it is known that due to the tidal interaction between the Earth and the Moon, the Earth’s spin slows down and the Moon goes away. This has been measured first with ancient eclipses, and since 1969 with Lunar Laser ranging, reaching extreme accuracy at 3.83 cm/year. The age of the Moon is now also very well determined at 4.425 Ga. But it has also been realized, more than fifty years ago, that the simple tidal model of Darwin, starting with the present tidal rate, leads to a collision of the Moon with the Earth at about 1.4 Ga, incompatible with the known age of the Moon. In our model, we deliberately avoided to take into account the geological data as we wanted a model that would be free from any circular reasoning. We considered an analytical model, similar to (Webb, 1982), but more refined, with a hemispheric continent that evolves backward in time towards a global ocean, taking into account the plate tectonic reconstruction in the first Ga. This induces a non-trivial analytic treatment that takes into account the continental drift. Still, this model has only two parameters, as in (Webb, 1982), or (Tyler, 2021). An exploration of the parameter space and a search for the best fit to the present rate of tidal dissipation, and the age of the Moon leads to a single solution, fitting these constraints extremely well.
Moreover, this single solution agrees very well with most of the relevant geological data. Two points are of particular interest as they are obtained with cyclostratigraphic at 1.4 Ga, and 2.46 Ga. The agreement with those data points is amazing.