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The Moon.

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Presentation on theme: "The Moon."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Moon

2 Goal of the class To understand the features of the moon
Question of the day: How are the tides on earth caused? Previous answer: The star (sun) gives lights to the planets and the moon and it’s reflected from the surface to Earth Previous Question of the day: What gives the light to planets and the moon?

3 What is the Moon? A natural satellite
One of 168 moons in our Solar System The only moon of the planet Earth As of October 2008, there are 176 known natural moons orbiting planets in our Solar System. 168 moons orbit the "full-size" planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune), while 8 moons orbit the smaller "dwarf planets" (Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, Makemake, and Eris).

4 Moon Facts 12,756.3 km diameter 23 degree axis tilt (seasons!)
Surface temps : -73 °C to 48 °C Thick atmosphere, mild greenhouse effect Liquid water – lots! - at surface 3476 km diameter 7 degree tilt (~no seasons) Surface temps: –153 °C to 107 °C No atmosphere No liquid water … Ice at poles in shadows?

5 How did the moon form? There are a number of theories about where the moon came from but this is my favourite!

6 The Moon’s Surface No atmosphere No liquid water Extreme temperatures
Daytime = 107 °C Nighttime = -153 °C 1/6 Earth’s gravity As of October 2008, there are 176 known natural moons orbiting planets in our Solar System. 168 moons orbit the "full-size" planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune), while 8 moons orbit the smaller "dwarf planets" (Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, Makemake, and Eris).

7 The Moon’s Features The moon is covered with millions of craters
Up to 2500 km (1,553 miles) across Most formed by meteorite impact on the Moon Some formed by volcanic action inside the Moon Originally thought to be “seas” by early astronomers Darkest parts of lunar landscape Filled by lava after crash of huge meteorites on lunar surface 3-4 billion years ago Mostly basalt rock Remember sea of tranquility

8 Craters Maria

9 Far Side of the Moon First seen by Luna 3 Russian space probe in 1959
Surface features different from near side More craters Very few maria Thicker crust

10 Moon Shapes FULL CRESCENT GIBBOUS QUARTER

11 The Tides Tides caused by pull of Moon’s gravity on Earth High tide
Side facing Moon and side away from Moon Every 12 hours, 25 ½ minutes Low tide On sides of Earth

12 Exploring the Moon 1950s to 1960s - probes
Neil Armstrong - First man on the Moon – July 20, 1969 Six Apollo missions ( ) 382 kg rocks 12 Americans have walked on the moon

13 Moon base of the future? What would you need to live there?

14

15 Dreamworks image


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