Title: Planetary Configurations
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3The Illusion of changing Lunar Size
Sequence of photos over Seattle, with the final
one a longer exposure
4Synodic vs Sidereal for the Moon
5View of the Moons Orbit
6Attributes of the Earth-Moon System
7Making Eclipses
8Anatomy of Solar Eclipses
9Eclipse Tracks
10Baileys Beads
11Lunar Eclipses
12A Lunar Eclipse
13Share Question
- In order for a solar eclipse to occur, the Moon
must be - a) high in the sky
- b) near first or last quarter
- c) near new moon
- d) near full moon
- e) over another country
14Sequence of Lunar Phases
15Orbital View of Lunar Phases
16Geometry of Lunar Phases Earth Perspective
17Snapshots of Lunar Phases What doesnt change?
18Lunar Rotation
19Share Question
- As seen from the Moon, how often does the Sun
rise? - a) Never.
- b) About every 24 hours.
- c) About once per week.
- d) About once per month.
- e) About once per year.
- As seen from the Moon, how often does the Earth
set? - a) Never.
- b) About every 24 hours.
- c) About once per week.
- d) About once per month.
- e) About once per year.
20Prominent Lunar Missions
- Luna 3 1959, Soviet
- 1st pictures of Moons far side
- Apollo 11 July 20, 1969
- Astronauts Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins
first on Moon - Apollos 11-17 1969-1972
- Returned 400 kg of Lunar samples
- Moon exploration continues to search for water
and to study its structure
21Soviet Commemorative Stamps
22Dark Side of the Moon
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24Apollo 11
25Buzz Aldrin
26Flag on the Moon
27Lunar Footprint
Mare Basalt
Highland Breccia
Highland Anorthosite
28Water Ice on the Moon
- Lunar probes Clementine and Lunar Prospector
have provided suggestive evidence for the
existence of water ice in permanent shadows near
the lunar poles.
29Water Found on the Moon
- Four spacecraft recently reported small amounts
of H2O and/or OH at the Moon - Indias Chandrayaan mission
- NASAs Cassini mission
- NASAs EPOXI mission
- NASAs LCROSS mission
- The first three measured the top few mm of the
lunar surface. LCROSS measured plumes of lunar
gas and soil ejected when a part of the
spacecraft was crashed into a crater. - How much water? Approximately 1 ton of lunar
regolith will yield 1 liter of water
This false-color map created from data taken by
NASAs Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) on Chandrayaan
is shaded blue where trace amounts of water (H2O)
and hydroxyl (OH) lie in the top few mm of the
surface.
30How was Water Detected?
- Lunar soil emits infrared thermal radiation. The
amount of emitted light at each wavelength varies
smoothly according to the Moons temperature. - H2O or OH molecules in the soil absorb some of
the radiation, but only at specific wavelengths - All four infrared spectrographs measure
absorption by water.
model with thermal radiation only
model with thermal radiation and absorption by
molecules
An infrared spectrum measured by LCROSS (black
data points) compared to models (red line)
31The Big Picture
- Lunar water may come from solar wind hydrogen
striking the surface, combining with oxygen in
the soil. It may also arrive via meteorite and
comet impacts. Both processes are likely. - Lunar water may be bounced by small impacts to
polar regions, forming ice in permanently
shadowed craters - Similar processes may occur on other airless
bodies (e.g., Mercury, asteroids) - Water-laden lunar regolith may be a valuable
resource, possibly supporting future lunar
exploration activities
Discovery of water on the moon may support future
activities on the lunar surface and beyond.
Artwork from NASA / Pat Rawlings.
32Tidal Forces
- Tidal forces are a consequence of how gravity
from one body acting on a second body varies
across that second body. - Gravity is
- A vector
- Changes with distance
- Both Moon and Sun contribute to tides at the
Earth (Suns tidal force about half of Moons) - Spring tide - when they add up (Sun, Earth, and
Moon aligned at New and Full phases) - Neap tide - when tides are at odds (1st qtr. and
3rd qtr. Lunar phases)
33The Tidal Force
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35Lunar Deformation
- This is a false-color plot of the Moons
deviation from spherical shape. Blue is
squashedness (near the poles) and red is
stretchedness (mostly at front and rear faces).
Based on data from Clementine.
36Roche Limit
- Gravity scales like, FG 1/r2
- Tidal forces scale like, FT 1/r3
- Different dependence on distance suggests that
tidal forces (although weak) could overcome
surface gravity at some close distance, which is
called the Roche Limit - One kind of Roche Limit is to ask how close a
moon must come to a planet before the tidal force
of the planet lifts a rock off the surface of the
moon.
37The Roche Limit
38Tidal Evolution of Lunar Orbit
39Lunar Surface
- Regolith layer of rock and dust debris built up
from meteoritic impacts - Mare few craters
- Terrae many craters
- Galileo discovered Lunar craters in 1609
- Craters
- Reveals properties of sub-surface
- Amount of cratering related to surface age
40Stretch of Lunar Terrain
41Lunar Climate
- The escape speed from the Moon is 2.3 km/sec, and
so it has essentially no permanent atmosphere - Moon does keep a transient atmosphere from
capture of solar wind and radioactive decay in
rocks (composition mainly He, Ne, Ar, and H) - Without an atm., the sky is always black, and
there are large day-night temperature swings,
from 400 K (260 F) to 100 K (-280 F) - Earth has a 20 K (36 F) temperature swing on
average
42Crater Formation
- FEATURES
- Impact produces a crater
- Sprays ejecta
- Often leaves a rim
- Sometimes with associated bright rays (radial
spokes, possibly a consequence of color
contrast)
- Impact converts kinetic energy to thermal,
acoustic, and mechanical energy - melting
- thudding
- wrecking
43Crater Formation
44Share Question
- Why are some large crater walls sharp and steep,
while others are more rounded? - a) different volcanos make different
craters - b) age differences
- c) size differences among the impact
bodies - d) composition differences among the
impact bodies - e) seismic activity on the Moon
45The Copernicus Crater
46Rays
47Crater Dating
- Count number of craters, divide by cratering
rate, get an age! - CAUTIONS
- Erosion
- Cratering rate can vary over time
- Crater saturation overcrowding (craters upon
craters) - NOTE Erosion can also bias relative numbers of
different sized craters, since smaller craters
tend to get erased faster.
48Moons Interior
49Origin of the Moon
- The Moon is old.
- The chemical composition of the Moon and Earth is
similar but not identical. - Near absence of the iron core in Moon.
- The Moons orbit is inclined to the Earths
equator, somewhat inclined to the ecliptic, and
is prograde.
50Models
- Fission Theory
- Moon spun off from rapidly rotating Earth
after iron core formed - Binary Accretion Theory formed as a pair
- Capture Theory having formed elsewhere, the
Moon was captured in a close encounter - Giant Impact Theory collision between
Mars-sized body and Earth debris collects to
form our Moon
51Model Schematics
52Challenges
- Fission
- Moons orbit inclined to Earth equator
- Needed rotation at once per 4 hrs why was Earth
so fast? - Binary
- why no iron in Moon?
- Capture
- Capture difficult (how to slow down?)
- Are Earth and Moon compositions too similar?
- Giant Impact
- favored
53Artistic Impression of Giant Impact
54Giant Impact Theory
- Similar composition to Earth because debris
contains mantle material - Different composition owing to the impacting body
- Moons orbit being inclined is not surprising
- Body was iron-poor and Earths iron core was
already formed