Revision as of 03:05, 2 June 2002 view sourceWojPob (talk | contribs)2,524 editsm aligning image← Previous edit | Revision as of 13:43, 21 July 2002 view source Heron (talk | contribs)Administrators29,256 editsm spNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
]] | |||
The '''Moon''' is the only natural ] of the ], and is oftentimes called '''Luna''' (] for ''moon'') to distinguish it from the general use of the word "moon". | |||
The Moon is distinguished from the satellites of other planets by its initial capital letter; the other moons are described ]. | |||
*], ]'s only natural ], is more commonly called "The Moon." When capitalized, the term "Moon" refers to this body. | |||
<table align="right"><tr><td>http://meta.wikipedia.com/upload/moon-galileo-color-thumb.jpg</tr></td> | |||
*]s of any ] are also referred to by the term "moon." The term is not capitalized in this case. | |||
</table> | |||
''This is a ] page; that is, one that just points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page.'' | |||
''This color image of the Moon was taken by the ] spacecraft at 9:35 a.m. PST ], ], at a range of about 350,000 miles. The color composite uses monochrome images taken through ], ], and near-] filters. The concentric, circular Orientale basin, 600 miles across, is near the center; the near side is to the right, the far side to the left. At the upper right is the large, dark Oceanus Procellarum; below it is the smaller Mare Humorum. These, like the small dark Mare Orientale in the center of the basin, formed over 3 billion years ago as basaltic lava flows. At the lower left, among the southern cratered highlands of the far side, is the South-Pole-Aitken basin, similar to Orientale but twice as great in diameter and much older and more degraded by cratering and weathering. The cratered highlands of the near and far sides and the Maria are covered with scattered bright, young ray craters. '' | |||
=== Physical characteristics === | |||
*Diameter: 3476 km | |||
*Surface area: ] | |||
*Orbital radius: 384,400 kilometers (238,900 miles) | |||
*Mass: 7.34 × 10<sup>22</sup> kg | |||
*Gravity: approx. 1/6 that of Earth | |||
*Rotational period: 27.32 days | |||
*Orbital period: 27.32 days | |||
Since the moon's rotational period is exactly the same as its orbital period, we always see the same face of the Moon pointed towards the Earth. This synchronicity is a result of tidal friction slowing down the moon's rotation in its early history, a process known as ]. As a result of this tidal locking, the Earth's rotation is also gradually being slowed down by the Moon, and the Moon is slowly receding from the Earth as the Earth's rotational momentum is transferred to the Moon's orbital momentum. The gravitional attraction that the Moon exerts on the Earth is the cause of ] in the sea. Tidal flow is synchronised to the Moon's orbit around the Earth. | |||
The Earth and Moon orbit about their common center of mass, which lies inside the Earth about 4700 km from the Earth's center. When viewed from Earth's North pole, the Earth and Moon rotate counter clockwise about their axes, Moon orbits Earth counter-clockwise and Earth orbits the Sun counter-clockwise. | |||
The Moon's orbital plane about the Earth is inclined by 5 degrees with respect to the Earth's orbital plane about the Sun (the ] plane). The Moon's orbital plane along with its spin axis rotates clockwise with a period of 18.6 years, always maintaining the 5 degree inclination. The points where the Moon's orbit crosses the ecliptic are called the lunar "nodes": the North (or ascending) node is where the Moon crosses to the North of the ecliptic; the South (or descending ) node where it crosses to the South. Solar ]s occur when a node coincides with the new Moon; lunar eclipses when a node coincides with the full Moon. | |||
The inclination of the Moon's orbit makes it rather unlikely that the Moon formed along with the Earth or was captured later; its origin is the subject of strong scientific debate. The most accepted theory states that the Moon originated from the collision between the young ] and an impactor the size of ] and was formed from material ejected from Earth as a result of the collision. This is called the ]. New simulations published in August 2001 support this theory . This theory is also corroborated by the fact that the Moon has all the same minerals as the Earth, albeit in different proportions. | |||
The Moon exhibits different ] as the relative positions of the Sun, Earth and Moon change, appearing as the ] when the Sun and Moon are on opposite sides of the Earth, and becoming invisible as the ] when they are on the same side. The time between two full moons is 29.5 days; it is longer than the time it takes the Moon to orbit the Earth since the Earth-Moon system is orbiting the Sun. The phases are not created by the shadow of the Earth on the moon; instead, they are a result of our seeing only part of the illuminated half of the Moon. In the Northern hemisphere, if the right side of the Moon is dark, the light part is shrinking: the Moon is waning (moving towards a new Moon). If the left side is dark, the Moon is waxing (moving towards a full Moon). The ] "DOC" represents this ("D" is the waxing Moon; "O" the full moon; and "C" the waning moon). In the Southern hemisphere, this is reversed, and the mnemonic is "COD". A french mnemonic is that the waxing moon at its first "premier" quarter phase looks like a 'p', and the waning moon at its last "dernier" quarter looks like a 'd'. One more (Northern hemisphere) mnemonic, which works for most Romance languages, says that the Moon is a liar: it spells "C", as in ''crescere'' (Italian for "to grow") when it wanes, and "D" as in ''decrescere'' ("decrease") when it waxes. | |||
By what can only be a truly extraordinary coincidence, the apparent size of the Moon as seen from the Earth is almost exactly the same as the apparent size of the Sun, so that total ] are possible where the Moon almost completely covers the Sun and the solar ] becomes visible to the ]. | |||
The Moon (and also the Sun) appear larger when close to the horizon. This is a purely psychological effect (atmospheric refraction and its larger distance actually causes the image of the Moon near the horizon to be slightly smaller); it is assumed that size judgments for overhead objects were not important during evolution of the cognitive apparatus and are therefore inaccurate. | |||
Various lighter and darker colored areas create the patterns seen by different cultures as ], the rabbit and the buffalo, amongst others. ] and ] chains are also prominent lunar features, whereas the lunar ] were believed by ancient ] to be water-filled ], hence their names, such as the ]. | |||
=== The Moon in myth === | |||
The Moon has figured prominently in various mythologies and folk beliefs. The Greek goddess ] and the Roman ] were associated with the Moon, as were many other female gods (but notice that the Japanese goddess ] is associated with the Sun and her brother, ], with the Moon, an unusual inversion that ]'s invented ] mythology repeats, making Isil, the Moon, male, while Anar, the Sun, is female). The term ] is derived from Luna because of the folk belief in the Moon as a cause of periodic insanity. Folklore also stated that ] such as ] and ], mythical creatures capable of changing form between ] and beast, drew their power from the Moon and would change into their bestial form during the ]. | |||
=== The exploration of the Moon === | |||
The other side of the Moon, often incorrectly called "the dark side", was first seen on ] ] when the unmanned ] probe Luna 2 was launched into an orbit over it. "The dark side" is a misnomer since it is lit up by the ] in the same way as the near side, it is just that we never see it from our vantage point on Earth. | |||
Humans first landed on the Moon on ], ] as the culmination of a ]-inspired space race between Russia and America. The first ] on the Moon was ], captain of ]. The last man to stand on the Moon was scientist ], who as part of ] walked on the Moon in December, ]. | |||
<center> | |||
http://meta.wikipedia.com/upload/moon-apollo17-schmitt_boulder-thumb.jpg | |||
</center> | |||
''Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt standing next to boulder at Taurus-Littrow during third EVA. '' |
Revision as of 13:43, 21 July 2002
- Luna, Earth's only natural satellite, is more commonly called "The Moon." When capitalized, the term "Moon" refers to this body.
- Natural satellites of any planet are also referred to by the term "moon." The term is not capitalized in this case.
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that just points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page.