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The Moon By: Audrey Luecken Krissy Denby Drew Wolod
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Dimensions The moon’s diameter is 3,475 kilometers or 2,150 miles It is about ¼ the size of the Earth It’s density 3.3 times the density of water The moons iron core is smaller than Earths The moons gravity attraction is 1/6 of Earths attraction
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Lunar Surface Galileo saw two types of terrain with his telescope –Dark Lowlands –Bright Highlands The dark parts of the moon were thought to be seas and were named Maria. This would be disproved later because the moon does not have oceans
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Lunar Surface Tectonic forces aren’t active on the moon –Therefore no earthquakes or volcanoes There is no atmosphere on the moon –Different types of erosion occur Tiny space particles (micrometeorites) bombard the surface and smooth out the landscape
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Lunar Surface The moon rocks are usually rounded on top of they are not exposed to the lunar surface The moon hasn’t changed in the last 3 billion years except for a few craters created by large meteorites.
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Craters The most obvious features on the lunar surface –There are even craters within craters The larger ones are about 250 kilometers (150 miles) in diameter –Roughly the width of India Most craters were created by the impact of rapidly moving debris
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Craters Upon impact, the high speed meteoroid compresses the material it strikes, then almost instantaneously the compressed rock rebounds, ejecting material from the crater –Imagine a rock being dropped in the water Most ejected material lands near the crater, building a rim around it The heat that is generated by impact can sometimes melt the impacted rock –Astronauts have brought back glass beads produced in this manner
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Highlands Make up most of the lunar surface The entire “back” of the moon is made up of highlands Within highland regions are mountain ranges –The highest lunar peaks reach elevations approaching 8 kilometers (only 1 kilometer shorter than Mount Everest)
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Maria MMMMaria is the name given to the areas that were impacted by meteoroids –T–T–T–They look like “seas” because they are darker LLLLava also flows out in basaltic craters
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Regolith Regolith is unconsolidated debris that is piled up over billions of years It is composed of igneous rock, breccia, glass beads, and lunar dust
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Lunar History The moon is the nearest planetary neighbor to the Earth Some scientists support the hypothesis that a giant asteroid collided with Earth to produce the moon Scientists learned the history of the moon by observing and measuring its craters
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Lunar History Scientists concluded that the moon evolved in three phases: –The Original Crust (highlands) –Maria Basins –Rayed Craters
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Lunar History Early: It was continually impacted and swept up debris Enough impact melted the moons outer shell therefore no atmosphere Later: The moon formed Maria Basins(between 3.2 and 3.8 billion years) The final prominent feature that was created were rayed craters
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Moon Rocks
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Moon Facts WWWWho discovered: The moon is too much of a prominent feature in the night sky that no one could of said to have discovered TTTThe surface area of the moon is 14,658,000 square miles or 9.4 billion acres OOOOnly 59% of the moon's surface is visible from earth
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The moon rotates at 10 miles per hour compared to the earth's rotation of 1000 miles per hour When a month has two full moons, the second full moon is called a blue moon The moon has no global magnetic field.
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Blue Moon!
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Moon Facts IIIIt takes the moon 27 days to orbit the Earth TTTThe moons orbit is counterclockwise TTTThe moon orbits Earth at an average speed of 2,288 miles per hour The moon is not a light source. Its light is reflected off the sun The moon causes many of the oceans tides because of gravity
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Moon Facts A lunar halo is caused by light refracted through ice crystals in cirrus clouds. (ring around the moon)
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The Moon is NOT made of cheese
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Works cited Picture: Solar System Exploration. Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. Space Wallpaper - Free Space Wallpaper, Backgrounds and Computer Desktops. Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. Climate, Weather And. Space News From SpaceDaily.Com. Web. 01 Apr. 2011..Let’s Launch a Rocket to the Moon! Web. 01 Apr. 2011..http://mm04.nasaimages.org/MediaManager/srv r?mediafile=/Size4/NVA2-4- NA/6322/ducttape_apollo17_big.jpg&userid=1&username=admin&resolution=4&serv ertype=JVA&cid=4&iid=NVA2&vcid=NA&usergroup=NASA_Astronomy_Picture_of_th e_Day_Collecti-4-Admin&profileid=16 Climate, Weather And. Space News From SpaceDaily.Com. Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. Let’s Launch a Rocket to the Moon! Web. 01 Apr. 2011..http://mm04.nasaimages.org/MediaManager/srv r?mediafile=/Size4/NVA2-4- NA/6322/ducttape_apollo17_big.jpg&userid=1&username=admin&resolution=4&serv ertype=JVA&cid=4&iid=NVA2&vcid=NA&usergroup=NASA_Astronomy_Picture_of_th e_Day_Collecti-4-Admin&profileid=16 COSMOS Magazine | The Science of Everything. Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. Catching the Light: Astrophotography by Jerry Lodriguss.Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. "Member Profile: Jack Brandt217: Digital Photography Review." Digital Cameras: Digital Photography Review, News, Reviews, Forums, FAQ. Web. 01 Apr. 2011.. Information Moon Information Resource And Guide. Web. 01 Apr. 2011..
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