ASTRONOMY 161 Introduction to Solar System Astronomy Class 4.

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Transcript of ASTRONOMY 161 Introduction to Solar System Astronomy Class 4.

ASTRONOMY 161Introduction to Solar System Astronomy

Class 4

Moon Phases & EclipsesWednesday, January 10

Astronomical “movies”

Lunation (Phases of the Moon)

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap051113.html

Shadow of the Earth (Lunar eclipse)http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0311/112003lunareclipse_koehn.gif

Shadow of the Moon (Solar eclipse)http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/9803/moonshad_goes_big.gif

Moon Phases & Eclipses: Key Concepts

(1) Lunar phases change as we see more or less of the Moon’s sunlit half.

(2) The Moon rotates about its axis as it revolves around the Earth.

(3) The sidereal month=27.3 days; the synodic month=29.5 days.

(4) A lunar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes through the Earth’s shadow.

(5) A solar eclipse occurs when the Earth passes through the Moon’s shadow.

(1) The Moon’s phases change as we see more

or less of the Moon’s sunlit half.

Full

Waning Gibbous Waxing Gibbous

Last Quarter First Quarter

Waning Crescent Waxing Crescent

New

The Moon is a sphere illuminated by the Sun.

Half closest to Sun is light.

Half furthest from Sun is dark.

Gibbous and crescent shapes

result from perspective.

Example: Crescent Moon

We see Moon in almost the same direction as Sun.

We see only a sliver of Moon’s sunlit side.

We see crescent Moon close to Sun in sky.

“Horns” of crescent point away from Sun.

(2) The Moon rotates about its axis as it

revolves around the Earth.

On Earth, we always see the same side of the Moon (“near side”).

The “far side” is always turned away from us.

No rotation of the Moon:

Observer on distant star always sees same side.

Observer on Earth sees all sides.

One rotation per revolution:

Observer on distant star sees all sides.

Observer on Earth always sees same side.

(3a) The length of the

SIDEREAL month = 27.3 days

Sidereal month = time for one revolution of Moon

around Earth.

The view from Earth:

Early afternoon of Thursday, Sept 7, 2006:

full Moon in Pisces.

Late evening of Wednesday, Oct 4, 2006:

Moon in Pisces again (but now it is gibbous).

(3b) The length of the

SYNODIC month = 29.5 days

Synodic month = time between one full Moon and

the next (or one new Moon and the next).

The view from Earth:

Early afternoon of Thursday, Sept 7, 2006:

full Moon in Pisces.

Late evening of Friday, Oct 6, 2006:

full Moon again (but now it is in Aries).

Why is SYNODIC month longer than

SIDEREAL month?

Synodic – measured relative to Sun

Sidereal – measured relative to stars

Sun is a moving target; 2.3 extra days to catch up.

Total Solar Eclipse:

Total Lunar Eclipse:

The shadow of the Earth (or any other object)

has two parts:

Umbra: inner part of shadow, Sun completely hidden.

Penumbra: outer part of shadow, Sun partially hidden.

Earth’s Shadow:

Earth’s umbra stretches 1.4 million kilometers (3.7

times average Earth-Moon distance).

At the Moon’s orbit, Earth’s umbra is 9000

kilometers wide (2.6 times Moon’s diameter).

The Moon can fit inside the Earth’s umbra, with

room to spare.

(4) A lunar eclipse occurs when the Moon

passes through the Earth’s shadow.

Lunar eclipses occur when Earth is between Sun and Moon.

Lunar eclipses occur at FULL MOON.

Three types of lunar eclipse

(1) Penumbral:

None of Moon enters umbra. Boring.

(2) Total:

All of Moon enters umbra. Totality lasts up to 1 hour 40 minutes.

(3) Partial:

Part of Moon enters umbra.

(5) A solar eclipse occurs when the Earth

passes through the Moon’s shadow.

Moon umbra stretches for 380,000 kilometers.

Minimum Earth-Moon distance =

= 363,000 kilometers.

Maximum Earth-Moon distance =

= 405,000 kilometers.

Solar eclipses occur when Moon

is between Sun and Earth.

Solar eclipses occur at NEW MOON.

Three types of solar eclipse

(1) Total: Observer is in Moon’s umbra; Moon

completely hides Sun.

(2) Annular: Moon umbra falls short of Earth;

Moon is surrounded by a ring of Sun.

(3) Partial: Observer is in penumbra, to one side of

umbra; Moon takes ‘bite’ out of Sun.

Moon’s Shadow:

The Moon’s orbital motion makes its umbra sweep

rapidly over the Earth.

Total solar eclipse is visible from a narrow path (up

to 270 km wide) for a short time (up to 7.5 min).

Total lunar eclipse is visible from half the Earth.

From Columbus, next total lunar: Mar 3, 2007; next

total solar: Sep 14, 2099

Few closing questions:

1) Why are eclipses not frequent? (medium)

2) During a total lunar eclipse, what is seen by an

observer on the surface of the Moon? (easy)

3) For an observer on the Moon, does Earth show

phases? (easy)

4) Is there more solar or lunar eclipses? (hard)