Earth’s Satellite CHERALYN TATE/ASTRONOMY POWERPOINT PRESENTATION 2011.
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Transcript of Earth’s Satellite CHERALYN TATE/ASTRONOMY POWERPOINT PRESENTATION 2011.
Earth’s SatelliteCHERALYN TATE/ASTRONOMY POWERPOINT PRESENTATION 2011
The date: July 1969. The place: the Moon ; The event: Men set foot on the moon; the first men to walk on
the moon used the lunar module to ferry them from the command module, later Buzz Aldrin stood on the
moon
STAGE of DEVELOPMENT
The 1st stage in the development of the solar system may have been a vast cloud of
gases and dust. As parts of the cloud cooled, they condensed into rock. Some of
the larger rocks, pulled other rocks towards them. In time, these growing mases of rock
collected to form the moon.
The MOVING MOON
Unlike the sun and the stars, the moon has no light of its own. Moonlight is really sunlight reflected from the moon’s surface. The amount of sunlight that the moon reflects towards the earth varies. Sometimes we see a whole side of the moon lit up like a huge silver disc. At other times, we see only a part of the lighted side. The shape that we see then is not a disc, but a crescent. These different shapes are called phases of the moon.
The phases occur because the moon orbits the earth. When the moon is at the side facing us is in shadow. We cannot see the
moon at all then. This phase is called NEW MOON. After 2 or 3 days the moon has moved on some distance. Now we see just the
thin edge of its lighted side. This is the CRESCENT MOON. The crescent grows until a week after new moon, you see half of the
lighted side. This phase is known as the first quarter. This means that the moon has travelled through one-quarter of its orbit.
While the moon circles the earth, the earth is continually traveling round the sun. As the Earth and its moon travel together in their
orbits round the sun, the moon sometimes passes directly between the sun and the earth. At other times, the earth becomes
between the sun and the moon. This is the cause of eclipses.
The gravitational pull of the moon is only one-sixth that of the earth. A 175lb astronaut and his 125lb backpack weigh only 50 lbs on the moon.
GALILEO THE FAMOUS ITALIAN ASTRONOMER, WAS THE FIRST MAN TO TURN HIS TELESCOPE ON THE MOON. HE CALLED THE FLAT AREAS MARIA, THE LATIN WORD FOR “SEAS” GALILEO DREW THE FIRST ROUGH MAP OF THE LUNAR SURFACE ITALIAN ASTRONOMER
Galileo
Craters are flat, low-lying areas, roughly circular in shape, the largest by mountains, largest is “CLAVIUS” 145 miles
across
In one of two ways, volcanic action or scars of collisions between the earth and meteors
Did you know that the Moon features its own seas?
On the moon and in outer space there is no air to scatter the light, in the black skies over the moon and in outer
space
Venus and the 37 Moon, Goodnight and Sleep tight…