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Lunar Phase Review

Lunar Phase Review. Lunar phases repeat through the Lunar cycle-certain phases are visible only at certain times of the day (or night). 6am. 12am. 12pm. 6pm. Lunar Phase Review. Lunar Phase Review. Eclipses. What is an eclipse?

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Lunar Phase Review

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  1. Lunar Phase Review Lunar phases repeat through the Lunar cycle-certain phases are visible only at certain times of the day (or night). 6am 12am 12pm 6pm

  2. Lunar Phase Review

  3. Lunar Phase Review

  4. Eclipses • What is an eclipse? • Any time one astronomical object casts a shadow on another we say that an eclipse is occurring. • The Earth can cast a shadow on the Moon • The Moon can cast a shadow on the Earth. Jupiter’s Moon Io is causing a solar eclipse to occur on part of Jupiter

  5. Angular vs. Actual Size orWhich is Bigger Your Thumb or the Moon? • In astronomy we often talk about the angular size of an object. • Angular sizes are measured in degrees or fractions of a degree. (1 arcminute = 1/60 of a degree, 1 arcsecond = 1/60 of an arcminute) • For eclipses it is important to note that the angular size of the Moon and the angular size of the Sun are the same, both are about 1/2 a degree. This does not mean the actual sizes are the same! Your thumb, held at arm’s length, appears to be about 2 degrees wide or 4 times the width of the Moon. (Try this yourself). The Moon is much larger than your thumb but it is also much farther away!

  6. What do you need for an Eclipse? • You need the Sun, Earth and Moon (in some order) to line up. • During a New Moon the Sun, Moon and Earth are lined up. • During a Full Moon they are lined up too. • But are they really lined up?

  7. The Moon is Far Away • Compared to their sizes, the Earth and Moon are far apart. • In fact it would take 30 Earths to span the distance between the Earth and the Moon! • And the Moon is only a third the size of Earth! • Since the Moon is far and small it’s easy for its shadow to miss the Earth if the two aren’t closely aligned with the Sun. Earth Moon The Earth-Moon system to scale

  8. The Moon’s Orbital Plane is Tipped • Compared to their sizes, the Earth and Moon are far apart. • In fact it would take 30 Earths to span the distance between the Earth and the Moon! • And the Moon is only a third the size of Earth! • Since the Moon is far and small it’s easy for its shadow to miss the Earth if the two aren’t closely aligned with the Sun. Earth Moon The Earth-Moon system to scale

  9. Two Planes Crossing Node • The orbital plane of the Earth around the Sun (the Ecliptic) and the orbital plane of the Moon around the Earth are tilted by 5 degrees. • The two planes cross at two points called nodes. • Eclipses can only occur when the Moon is at one of the nodes, that is when the Moon is on the Ecliptic! Node

  10. So What Do You Need for an Eclipse? The Moon must be either at • Full Moon or • New Moon and • be crossing the Ecliptic (be on one of the nodes) This happens at most twice a year

  11. Solar and Lunar Eclipses • When the shadow of the Moon strikes the Earth it is called a Solar Eclipse • When the shadow of the Earth strikes the Moon it is called a Lunar Eclipse

  12. Solar and Lunar Eclipses

  13. Solar Eclipse

  14. Lunar Eclipse

  15. Eclipse Seasons • Eclipse seasons are roughly 6 months apart • May have two eclipses (1 lunar, 1 solar) 2 weeks apart • Eclipses may not be total • Solar: total, annular, partial • Lunar: total, partial, penumbral

  16. Lunar Node Precession • Lunar orbit precession • Lunar nodes precession period is 18.6 years • Eclipse seasons come about three weeks earlier in subsequent years

  17. Annular Eclipse15 Jan 2010

  18. Annular / Partial Eclipse Shadows

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