It's turning into heat however. Citations:
https://physics.info/rotational-momentum/However, ignoring energy lost to heat generated by the tides, the angular momentum of the Earth-Moon system must remain constant.
In other words, conservation of momentum in a closed system is only true if you ignore any resultant energy lost through friction. In this case the moon/Earth is a closed system. Yet it still loses momentum via friction. So the friction still counts as a torque, even if both the things rubbing together are part of the closed system. Whether there's one planet or two, they're both closed systems as far as conservation laws go, so the same rules apply. Friction generates heat, which is a transfer of energy.
http://physics.bu.edu/~duffy/py105/Momentum.htmlThe total energy is always conserved, but the kinetic energy does not have to be; kinetic energy is often transformed to heat or sound during a collision.
Friction is basically a lot of little collisions. In those situations, kinetic energy becomes heat energy.
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/boundless-physics/chapter/conservation-of-energy/ Rotating objects have rotational kinetic energy.
Rotational kinetic energy can change form if work is done on the object.
Energy is never destroyed, if rotational energy is gained or lost, something must have done work on it to change the form of the energy.
I mean, it's not really high tech stuff here. If friction causes heat, and heat is energy then conservation of energy requires that it came from somewhere, which was the kinetic energy of particles involved in the friction collision.
Some of that energy came from the sun, but not all of it. In this case, it's not a given that a system which undergoes friction keeps spinning at the same rate, because it's losing energy to anotherform.
As for the sun warming things up yeah. But the sun doesn't make planets spin. In this case, the sun gives the atmosphere more
pressure, which
increases friction between the air and the planet. And that, on average, causes kinetic energy to be converted into heat energy at a faster rate.
One last thing and them I'm done I think:
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/02/120214-venus-planets-slower-spin-esa-space-science/According to the new data, Venus is rotating 6.5 minutes slower than it was 16 years ago, a result that's been found to correlate with long-term radar observations taken from Earth.
...
One possible cause for the slowed spin is friction caused by Venus' thick atmosphere and high-speed winds. The motion of the atmosphere on Earth, for example, has been observed to affect the planet's rotation rate, albeit to a much smaller degree.
So ... Venus's rotation period is losing 24
seconds per Earth-year, otherwise completely unexplained. Compare that to Earth losing 1.7
milli-seconds per century. At that scale it's looking more feasible that drag could be a big factor. Also if Venus had once been spinning much faster and atmospheric friction was proportional to speed, then there would have been a rapid slowdown at some point. e.g. if Venus spun once per day, but with the same 90 pascals pressure atmosphere, would it lose 24 * 240 seconds per Earth year at the start? (obviously you'd integrate the loss-function over time to get it more accurate than that).
Hmm, might be interesting to calculate the atm pressure on Earth vs Venus, multiply that by surface area, rotation speed, and see how close the numbers line up.