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 .) 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 about 4.5 billion years). Currently,
atomic clocks show that Earth's day lengthens, on average, by about 2.3 milliseconds per century. Given enough time, this would create a
mutual tidal locking between Earth and the Moon. The length of Earth's
day would increase and the length of a
lunar month would also increase. Earth's sidereal day would eventually have the same length as the
Moon's orbital period, about 47 times the length of the Earth day at present. However, Earth is not expected to become tidally locked to the Moon before the Sun becomes a
red giant and engulfs both. 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 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. ==Occurrence==