Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Moon, Moon Phases & Eclipses. The Moon Calendar The current standard calendar is solar calendar (Gregorian calendar) – counting days The moon phases.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Moon, Moon Phases & Eclipses. The Moon Calendar The current standard calendar is solar calendar (Gregorian calendar) – counting days The moon phases."— Presentation transcript:

1 Moon, Moon Phases & Eclipses

2 The Moon

3 Calendar The current standard calendar is solar calendar (Gregorian calendar) – counting days The moon phases have a period of 29.5 days, a good measure of time Lunar calendars – counting days and months E.g. Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar 29.5 * 12 = 354, 11 days less than 365 Lunisolar calendar – Chinese calendar, Hebrew calendar Adding leap months, with a circle of 19 years

4 The Moon’s Orbit around the earth

5

6 Moon Phases

7 When new moon occurs, what is the phase of the earth if you stand on the moon? Full earth! The earth always has an opposite phase to the moon.

8 Eclipses When One celestial object casts its shadow on the other one

9 Solar Eclipses Sun – the shadow of the moon on the earth Total solar eclipse in 1999

10 A – total eclipse B – annular eclipse C – partial eclipse

11 Lunar Eclipses Moon – the shadow of the earth on the moon

12

13 Moon’s orbit The orbit period around the earth – 27.3 days The spin period is exactly the same! We always see the same side of the moon! ( precisely speaking 59% of the surface during the whole period of the moon revolution. Reason: libration) The period of Lunar Phase – 29.5 days Because of the earth’s revolution in the space

14 Moon’s orbit The orbit plane of the moon is tilted by ~5 degree with respect to the earth’s orbit around the sun, unlike other planets

15 What’s the moon phase when a solar eclipse occurs? What’s the moon phase when a lunar eclipse occurs? New Moon Full Moon

16 Why aren’t there solar eclipses and lunar eclipses on EVERY new moon and full moon?

17 Two conditions must be satisfied for an eclipse to occur 1.The nodes of the moon’s orbit must be nearly aligned with the Sun and the Earth 2.The phase of the moon must be new or full

18

19 Eclipses Cycle Every year there are at least two lunar eclipses Lunar eclipses and solar eclipses always come in pairs Lunar eclipses can be seen everywhere on the earth, but the solar eclipses may only be seen on part of the earth

20 Near Side Far Side

21 Moon’s surface Maria (sigular mare, ‘sea’ in Latin) –Dark areas and were thought to be seas –Cover 31% of the near side, but only 2% of the far side –No water but vast pools of solidified lava that flowed into basins formed by comets/metors colliding –Nomenclature Latin terms describing the weather and abstract concepts –Smaller dark regions Lacus (Lake) Palus (marsh) Sinus" (bay) Maria Highland Crater

22 Moon’s surface Highland –Lighter color regions, or called Terrae –Many are impact basins’ outer rims –In contrast to earth, no major lunar mountains were formed as a result of tectonic events –Mountains and mountain ranges –Different brightness of the highlands and maria is because they are composed of different rock types Maria Highland Crater

23 Craters Formed when asteroids/comets hit the lunar surface Half a million craters with diameters larger than 1km Crater counting – to estimate the age of the lunar surface The largest crater is South Pole-Aitken basin, with 2,240 kms in diameter and 13 kms in depthSouth Pole-Aitken basin Nomenclature: –Large craters, deceased famous scientists, artists –Small craters, common first names Daedalus, 93 km in diameter Proposed as a site for a large radio telescope

24 The formation of the moon Born from the earth - broke off from the earth by centrifugal forces, and left the pacific ocean behind Captured by the earth’s gravity Co-formation with the earth Giant impact hypothesis –An impact of a Mars-sized body collide w/ the proto- Earth and ejected materials to orbit around the earth – the Moon http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIKmSQqp8wY

25 Lunar Interior Most Heavy materials (Fe, Ni, Etc.) came to earth in the collision There is a small iron-rich core Mantle and crust is primarily basaltic in composition

26 Lunar Atmosphere *Almost* non-existent –One trillionth the pressure on earth –Trace amounts from multiple sources Na/K from “sputtering” He-4 from solar wind Ar, Ra, & Po from radioactive decay No atmosphere has an effect on temperature –Wild variation: 35 K (-238 C) in polar craters –Day side temps up to 396 K (123 C

27 Explorations of the moon Ancient people observed the moon by naked eyes, and wrote poems and essays, and told myths Galileo first observed the moon using an telescope The only celestial body the human being has orbited and landed –First impact: Luna 2 of Soviet Union in 1959 –First far side picture: Luna 3 in 1959 –First soft landing: Luna 9 in 1966 –First men’s step on the moon: Apollo 11 in 1969 Several more missions occurred through 1974 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSLRMdYSA9M


Download ppt "Moon, Moon Phases & Eclipses. The Moon Calendar The current standard calendar is solar calendar (Gregorian calendar) – counting days The moon phases."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google