Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Lunar Phases and Eclipses Created by the Lunar and Planetary Institute For Educational Use.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Lunar Phases and Eclipses Created by the Lunar and Planetary Institute For Educational Use."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lunar Phases and Eclipses http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/gallery/Earth_Moon.jpg Created by the Lunar and Planetary Institute For Educational Use Only LPI is not responsible for the ways in which this powerpoint may be used or altered.

2 Preliminary Topics Before students can understand the reason for phases, they need to understand: The Moon orbits the Earth The Moon orbit at an angle with respect to the Earth’s orbit around the Sun The Moon doesn’t shine on its own; it reflects sunlight The scale of the Moon and Earth’s sizes and distance Please go through Earth and Moon statistics before trying to cover the reason for phases or eclipses. Ecliptic plane Moon’s orbital plane

3 The Moon The Moon shines by reflected sunlight. – On average, it reflects about 7% of the incident sunlight. – The Moon appears about 400,000 times fainter than the Sun in the sky. The phases of the Moon are the result of varying viewing angles throughout the month. – A common misconception is that the phases of the Moon are caused by the shadow of the Earth.

4 Moon Size ~ 1/4 width of Earth Radius of 1080 miles Gravity ~1/6 of Earth’s http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/IMAGES/SMALL/GPN-2000-001444.jpg

5 http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_rec.php?id=1624 Earth and Moon to Scale If Earth were a basketball, then the Moon would be a tennis ball, 23.5 feet away

6 Moon Rotation Spins on axis (rotates) once every 27.3 days Tilted ~1.5 degrees (Earth = 23.5)

7 Moon’s Orbit Orbits (revolves around) Earth every 27.3 days Elliptical orbit (not a perfect circle) 360,000 km 406,000 km 224,000 miles 252,000 miles http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=442

8 Moon Stats Moon’s orbit around Earth is inclined about 5 degrees to Earth’s plane of orbit around the Sun Ecliptic plane Sun Earth Moon Moon’s orbital plane Image created by LPI staff

9 New (couple days) Waxing Crescent (several days) 1 st Quarter Waxing Gibbous (several days) Full Waning Gibbous (several days) 3 rd Quarter Waning Crescent (several days) New Phases: Observing and Identifying http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/skytellers/moon_phases/about.shtml

10 Phases--Causes The Sun shines on the Moon. –When the sunlight reflects off the Moon’s far side, we call it a New Moon –When the sunlight reflects off on the Moon’s near side, we call it a Full Moon –Between New and Full, we see parts of the daytime side of the Moon. Golfball and Blacklight Activity

11 11 Please do NOT use this to teach phases; use to test for comprehension http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/questions/question3.html

12 starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/questions/phases.html

13 Eclipses The Sun and Moon occasionally line up so that we have an eclipse. –These eclipses happen every year –To see a solar eclipse, you need to be on a particular part of the Earth

14 14 When the Earth’s shadow covers the Moon, we have a lunar eclipse

15 Three types of Lunar Eclipses Penumbral lunar eclipse—the Moon only passes through the penumbra of Earth’s shadow Partial lunar eclipse—part of the Moon passes through the umbra of Earth’s shadow Total lunar eclipse—the entire Moon passes through the umbra of Earth’s shadow Who on Earth will be able to see a lunar eclipse? Anyone who can see the Moon (anyone who is on the nighttime side of the Earth during the eclipse)

16 Images from Fred Espenak http://www.mreclipse.com/LEphoto/LEgallery1/LEgallery1.html

17 Why is the Moon red during an eclipse? The Earth’s atmosphere filters some sunlight and allows it to reach the Moon’s surface The blue light is removed—scattered down to make a blue sky over those in daytime Remaining light is red or orange Some of this remaining light is bent or refracted so that a small fraction of it reaches the Moon Exact appearance depends on dust and clouds in the Earth’s atmosphere

18 Upcoming Lunar Eclipses June 15, 2011, Total lunar eclipse (not visible in US_ Dec 10, 2011, Total lunar eclipse (mostly not visible in US) June 4, 2012, Partial eclipse Nov. 28, 2012, Penumbral eclipse Apr. 25, 2013, Partial eclipse (not visible in US) May 25, 2013, Penumbral eclipse Oct. 18, 2013, Penumbral eclipse Apr 15, 2014, TOTAL ECLIPSE –visible here

19 19 Solar Eclipses When the Moon’s shadow covers part of the Earth Only happens at New Moon Three types: Annular, Partial, and Total

20 Total Solar Eclipse Observers in the “umbra” shadow see a total eclipse (safe to view the Sun); can see the corona Those in “penumbra” see a partial eclipse—not safe to look directly at Sun Only lasts a few minutes Path of Totality about 10,000 miles long, only 100 miles wide

21 Photo of a Total Eclipse http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/2006/multimedia/gal_008.php

22 Annular Solar Eclipse When the Moon is too far to completely cover the Sun—the umbra doesn’t reach the Earth Sun appears as a donut around the Moon

23 23 Photos of an Annular Eclipse http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/2006/multimedia/gal_010.php; photos taken by Fred Espenak

24 Upcoming Solar Eclipses Nov. 25, 2011, partial solar eclipse—not visible in USA May 20, 2012 (annular)—VISIBLE In USA Nov. 13, 2012, total eclipse—not visible in USA May 10, 2013, annular eclipse—not visible in USA Next Total Solar Eclipse in continental USA—August 21, 2017

25 Tides The Moon’s gravity tugs on the Earth. –It pulls the most on the part of Earth closest, which raises the atmosphere, the oceans, and even the rocks (a little) –It pulls the least on the part of Earth that’s farthest, which allows the oceans and atmosphere to be further from the Moon (and higher) –The Sun’s gravity does the same thing, but to a lesser extent

26 26 St. Michel, N. coast of France ~16.8 m highest tidal range in Nova Scotia

27 27 Nova Scotia Tides Wolfville, NS (16 m tidal range) Diurnal Tides (one high and one low every 12 hours and 25 minutes

28 28 Sun and moon effects can be additive or not…

29 29 Force imbalance in earth-moon system creates tidal bulges

30 Tides and the Moon

31 31 Second highest tidal range at Ancorage Alaska ~ 12 m


Download ppt "Lunar Phases and Eclipses Created by the Lunar and Planetary Institute For Educational Use."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google