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Published byShonda McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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The Moon The moon is Earth’s closest neighbor- 384,000 miles away If you traveled 100km/hr, it would take you 5 months to get there Rotates on its own axis Revolves around the Earth
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The moon cont... It takes the moon 27.3 days to rotate on its axis It also takes the moon 27.3 days to revolve around the Earth What does this mean??? One Day on the Moon is the same amount of time as one year on the moon!!!
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The Moon... Only one side of the moon always faces the Earth This is the Near side of the moon The other side of the moon always faces away from the Earth This is the far side of the moon
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The Phases of the Moon How does the moon change shape every month? The position of the Earth, moon, and sun cause the phases of the moon Moon Phases Simulation
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Phases of the Moon Terms to Know: Waxing- means “to grow” Is used when the moon goes from new moon to full moon Waning- term used when the moon is getting smaller Is used from full moon to new moon
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Terms To Know: Gibbous- “humpbacked” used to describe the moon when it is almost full between a full moon and a half moon, or between a half moon and a full moon Crescent- between a half moon and a new moon, or between a new moon and a half moon Looks like a letter “C”
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Eclipse An eclipse occurs when the moon's shadow hits Earth or Earth's shadow hits the moon Happens because of the moon's orbit (is tilted with respect to the Earth's orbit Usually, the moon does not go directly between the Earth and the sun
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Solar Eclipse Happens when the moon passes between the Earth and the sun, blocking the sunlight from reaching Earth Basically, the moon's shadow hits the Earth, which blocks out all the sun
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Lunar Eclipse Happens during a full moon when Earth is directly between the moon and the sun Earth's shadow blocks sunlight from reaching the moon Only occur during a full moon because this is when the moon is closest to Earth's shadow
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Eclipses
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Check out this website! This is sooooo cool! http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/lunar.html
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What do tides have to do with astronomy? What is a tide? – The rise and fall of water – Water rises for approx. 6hrs then falls for 6 hrs – Repeats this cycle daily
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The Tides What causes the tides? – The force of gravity pulls the moon and Earth (including all the water) toward each other – Tides happen because of differences in how much the moon pulls on different parts of Earth – Moon's gravity pulls water toward the point on Earth's surface closest to the moon
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High Tides The force of gravity is stronger where the moon is closer to the Earth (This causes high tides) The force of gravity is weaker where the moon is furthest away from the Earth ( – This causes the Earth as a whole to be pulled toward the moon. – Water is left behind, causes another high tide
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Low Tides Occur between the closest and furthest points from the moon Water flows away from these points, causing low tides
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What about the sun's gravity? The sun also has an effect on our tides New moon and full moon: sun, Earth, and moon are in a line – Gravity of sun and moon pull in one direction – Combined forces produce the biggest difference between low and high tide – This is called a spring tide
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cont... 1 st quarter and 3 rd quarter moon: – Line between earth and the sun is at a right angle – Sun's gravity is pulling in a different direction than the moon's gravity. – Produces a tide with the least difference between high and low tide – This is called a Neap Tide
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http://home.hiwaay.net/~krcool/Astro/moon/moo ntides/TideAni.gif
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http://www.moonconnection.com/moon-december- 2009.phtml
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