| Issue | 
							 
											A&A
									 
										Volume 453, Number 1, July I 2006				 
				
									 | 
	|
|---|---|---|
| Page(s) | 363 - 369 | |
| Section | Celestial mechanics and astrometry | |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20054516 | |
| Published online | 09 June 2006 | |
Second-order torque on the tidal redistribution and the Earth's rotation
        1 
        Royal Observatory of Belgium, 1180 Brussels, Belgium e-mail: s.lambert@oma.be 
      
        2 
        Department of Theoretical Physics, University of Madras, Chennai 600025, India 
      
Received: 
          14 
          November 
          2005
        
Accepted: 
          14 
          March 
          2006
        
This study presents a complete treatment of the second order 
torques on the Earth due to the action of each of the three parts of the degree 
2 potential (V20: zonal; V21: tesseral; and V22: sectorial) on 
the deformations produced by the other parts, and the consequent effects on 
nutation. The work of Mathews et al. (2002, J. Geophys. Res., 107, B4) contained a treatment of the action 
of the tesseral potential on tidal deformations, taking into account 
the presence of the fluid core, and also of the contributions from mantle 
anelasticity and ocean tides to the deformations. We extend that work to 
include the actions of the zonal and sectorial potentials too. Our 
computations show that an almost complete cancellation takes place 
between reciprocal contributions; the largest net effect reaches 
as on the in-phase 18.6-yr nutation in longitude. The total 
effect found on the precession is 0.1 mas/cy in longitude and 
in obliquity. The cancellations would have been complete 
but for the fact that (i) the values of the compliances (deformability 
parameters) are not the same for deformations excited by the three parts of the 
degree 2 potential even for a nondissipative Earth and (ii) anelasticity and 
ocean tides make the contributions to the compliances complex (besides 
being unequal for the three parts) and thus give rise to out-of-phase 
components in the response to tidal forcing.
Key words: reference systems / Earth
© ESO, 2006
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