phases, eclipses, tides and and the moon as a clock

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Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock.

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Page 1: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Phases, Eclipses, Tides and

And the moon as a clock.

Page 2: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock
Page 3: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock
Page 4: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Why do we only see one side of the moon?

• We see one side of the moon because it rotates and revolves at the same rate.

• Synchronous rotation

Page 5: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

• Why is there a full moon and not an eclipse every month?

Page 6: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock
Page 7: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Moon Phases:

• From New Moon to Full the visible portion of the Moon increases from the right…

• From Full to New the Left side is visible

Page 8: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Terms:

• Waxing: Getting Bigger• Waning: Getting Smaller

• Waxing Crescent: anything between a New moon and 1st Quarter moon.

• Waxing Gibbous: anything between a 1st Quarter and a Full moon.

Page 9: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Monthly Lunar Phase…

Page 10: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

We just had a full moon last Friday?

• What portion of the moon should be visible?

Page 11: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Eclipses

• Eclipses occur on other planets.

Page 12: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Io and Shadow

Copyright, NASA, via Cassini on route to Saturn in 2004

Page 13: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Two Types

• What are they?

Page 14: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Lunar Eclipse

Page 15: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Why is it red?

Page 16: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Why is it a dim red?

• The same reasons sunsets are red and the sky is blue.

Page 17: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Why is it a dim red?

Page 18: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Solar Eclipse

Page 19: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Solar Eclipse

Page 20: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

• Why does the moon just about cover the sun perfectly even though it is smaller?

• Though 400 times smaller, it is 400 times closer and appears just as large.

Page 21: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Why are lunar eclipses visible over a greater range of places than solar

eclipses?

• The earth casts a bigger shadow than the moon.

Page 22: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Compare Shadow Size

Page 23: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

• Umbra: darkest region of a shadow. Within the umbra an observer sees a total eclipse

• Penumbra: lighter region of a shadow. Observers see a partial eclipse if in the penumbra

Page 24: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Tides

Page 25: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Moon or Sun

• Which one do you think has a greater influence on our tides?

Page 26: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Tides:

• To understand tides we need to understand gravity.

• What two things affect the force of gravity?

Page 27: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The moon is roughly twice as important

• Even though the sun is bigger, the moon is a lot closer.

Force of Gravity = Gm1m2

d2

This is the mathematical form of what Law?

Page 28: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Earth’s Tides

Earth

Page 29: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Earth’s Tides

EarthMoon

The moon attracts the water closest to it the strongest so it bulges outward.

Page 30: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Earth’s Tides

EarthMoon

The moon attracts the water closest to it the strongest so it bulges outward.It attracts the earth more than the water on the opposite side so it sort of hangs back.

Page 31: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Earth’s Tides

EarthMoon

The moon attracts the water closest to it the strongest so it bulges outward.It attracts the earth more than the water on the opposite side so it sort of hangs back.

Force of GravityWeak …………. .Medium ………….. Strong

Page 32: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Earth’s Tides

EarthMoon

The result is a tidal bulge with two high tides and two low tides.

High Tide

Low Tide

Low Tide

High Tide

Page 33: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

How many tides are there a day?

• Two high tides and two low tides?

• Why? (Hint: How far apart are they)

Page 34: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Daily Tidal Cycle

EarthMoon

High Tide

Low Tide

Low Tide

High Tide

At Midnight it is High Tide at point A

A

Page 35: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Daily Tidal Cycle

EarthMoon

High Tide

Low Tide

Low Tide

High Tide

6 hours later at 6am the earth rotates you into an area of low tide.

A

Page 36: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Daily Tidal Cycle

EarthMoon

High Tide

Low Tide

Low Tide

High Tide

At Noon, another 6 hours later the earth rotates you again into high tide.

A

Page 37: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Daily Tidal Cycle

EarthMoon

High Tide

Low Tide

Low Tide

High Tide

Back to where it all started 6 hours later…

A

Page 38: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Two Special Tides

Page 39: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Spring Tide

• A High High Tide and Low Low Tide due to the combined gravitational forces of the moon and sun.

• Full moon• New Moon

Page 40: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Neap Tide

• The moon and sun fight and cancel each other out resulting in a smaller difference between high and low tides.

• 1st Quarter Moon• 3rd Quarter Moon

Page 41: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun Using the Moon to Tell Time

Page 42: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun Using the Moon to Tell Time

Earth

Page 43: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun

Earth

Kitty

Using the Moon to Tell Time

Page 44: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun

Earth

Using the Moon to Tell Time

What Time is it?

Page 45: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun

Earth

Using the Moon to Tell Time

What Time is it during a New moon?

Page 46: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun

Earth

Using the Moon to Tell Time

What Time is it?

Page 47: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

The Sun

Earth

Using the Moon to Tell Time

What Time is it during a Full moon?

Page 48: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Using the Moon to Tell Time

• A full moon will rise at Sunset and each day the moon will rise one hour after that.

Page 49: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock
Page 50: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Concept Check

• Does the moon give off its own light?

• If the moon gave off its own light would we see phases?

• The moon reflects light from the sun and this is why phases occur. If it gave off its own light it would always be seen as full.

Page 51: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Concept Check

• Is the term the “Dark Side of the moon” a misnomer?

Page 52: Phases, Eclipses, Tides and And the moon as a clock

Concept Check

• Under which phase can you see more of the moon?

• Waxing Gibbous or Waning Gibbous?