Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Moon, Our Constant Companion. Remember that the Moon doesn’t just go around the Earth. The pair orbit the Sun… Photo of Earth/Moon from MRO perigee.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Moon, Our Constant Companion. Remember that the Moon doesn’t just go around the Earth. The pair orbit the Sun… Photo of Earth/Moon from MRO perigee."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Moon, Our Constant Companion

2 Remember that the Moon doesn’t just go around the Earth. The pair orbit the Sun… Photo of Earth/Moon from MRO perigee apogee

3 The Moon is noticeably larger when it is near perigee

4 This Full Moon will pass through the Earth’s shadow! Total Lunar Eclipse Dates and times are in Universal Time (UT) You can think of UT as the same as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)

5 One thing we really want to understand – Why does the Moon go through phases?

6 Moon Phases Demonstration

7 Moon Phases 1.Half of the Moon is always lit by the Sun (we’re not talking about eclipses!) 2.The phase is how much of the lit half we can see from Earth. One full cycle – New Moon to New Moon – takes 29½ days Note the names and order of the phases

8 Notice that we always see the same side of the Moon

9 Does the Moon rotate? A.Yes B.No

10 Which statement is true for an observer located on the Moon? A.She would see the Earth rise in the east and set in the west. B.She would see the Earth rise in the west and set in the east. C.She would not see the earth rise or set.

11 Lunar eclipseSolar eclipse

12 The parts of a planet’s (or moon’s) shadow

13 The kinds of lunar eclipses

14 The next total lunar eclipse: September 27 7:07 – 10:27 p.m. Totality: 8:11 – 9:23 Greatest Eclipse: 8:48

15 The kinds of solar eclipses antumbra Aug 21, 2017 Visible from Wyoming, Nebraska

16 From the NASA Eclipse website

17 The Moon’s shadow on the Earth Taken from the international space station Taken by the GOES-7 weather satellite

18 Why we don’t see eclipses every month The Moon’s orbit around the Earth is tilted 5º relative to the ecliptic. The Moon passes through the ecliptic twice in every orbit  “nodes” “line of nodes”

19 Most of the times the Moon, Earth, and Sun line up, the Moon is above or below the Earth-Sun line.

20 This special arrangement is called an “eclipse season” The line of nodes goes through the Sun

21 BUT, the line of nodes precesses. Eclipse seasons occur slightly LESS than 6 months apart That precession, combined with the 29½ days lunar cycle, leads to …

22 The saros cycle – 18 years, 11⅓ days

23 From any given location (Alamosa, for example), which will you see more frequently? A.Total solar eclipses B.Total lunar eclipses

24 Astro-Cash Cab! Daniel Lovell Kylee Sowards Miranda Glowczewski Nick Smith Adrianna Cordova

25 1) What kind of eclipse is this? (There are TWO parts to this. The first is either “solar” or “lunar”.)

26 2) Starting with New Moon, put the following phases in the order in which they occur: New Moon Full Moon Waxing Gibbous Waning Crescent Third Quarter Waxing Crescent

27 3) True or False? Eclipse seasons occur about 1 year apart.

28 4) Match the parts of the Earth’s shadow to their correct name. A) Umbra B) Antumbra C) Penumbra 1 2 3


Download ppt "The Moon, Our Constant Companion. Remember that the Moon doesn’t just go around the Earth. The pair orbit the Sun… Photo of Earth/Moon from MRO perigee."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google