Astronomy by jatin

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AstronomyPlanetary Motion, Eclipses, Tides, & Phases of the Moon

GLT Saraswati Bal Mandir Sr. Sec. SchoolNehru Nagar ND=65

NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK

A PRESENTATION BYJATIN

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How the planets move…

Rotation – the spinning of a body (an object) on its axis

Orbit – the path that a body takes as it travels around another body

Revolution – one complete trip around an orbit.

Johannes Kepler – ancient astronomer that studied how planets move. 1st Law – planets do not move in a circle;

they move in an elongated circle called an ellipse.

2nd Law – planets move faster when they are closer to the sun.

3rd Law – planets that are farther from the sun take longer to orbit the sun

Pull of gravity (like a longer string) slower

orbithttp://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/physical_science/physics/mechanics/orbit/ellipse.html

Pull of gravity (like a shorter string)Faster orbit

What allows planets close to the sun to move faster and also to keep bodies (like the moon) in orbit? Gravity

24 hours – the time required for Earth to rotate once on its axis It takes 23 hours & 56 minutes. Axis – the imaginary line that runs from

the North Pole to the South Pole▪ Earth is tilted at 23.5

Earth spins in which direction? Counterclockwise. Therefore the sun rises in the east and sets in the west.

Seasons Seasons are caused by Earth’s tilt and its rotation

around the sun. Equinox – occurs when the sun is directly above

the equator. The number of daytime hours and nighttime hours are equal. Vernal equinox – March 21st is the beginning of spring. Autumnal equinox – Sept. 23rd is the beginning of Fall.

Solstice – when the sun is the furthest from the equator. Summer solstice – beginning of summer – June 22nd Winter solstice – beginning of winter – Dec. 22nd

http://www.teslasociety.com/pictures/solar10.jpg

Eclipse

Solar Eclipse – when the moon comes in between the Earth and the Sun

The shadow of the moon falls on part of the Earth

http://www.dkimages.com/discover/DKIMAGES/Discover/Home/Science/Astronomy-and-Space-Science/Solar-System/The-Sun/Eclipses/Eclipses-2.html

Solar Eclipse – What we see

http://www.iayc.org/eclipse/sofi_composite_2_crop.jpg

Eclipse

Lunar Eclipse – when the Earth comes in between the sun and moon.

The shadow of the Earth falls on the moon.

http://www.dkimages.com/discover/DKIMAGES/Discover/Home/Science/Astronomy-and-Space-Science/Solar-System/The-Planets/Earth/Moon/Eclipse/Eclipse-1.html

Lunar Eclipse – What we see

Tide Tide - The rise and fall

of the water level in the oceans caused by the force of gravity between the Earth and the moon High Tide – when water

facing the moon and water on the opposite side of the moon bulges.

Low Tide – happens between the 2 high tides

The moon is pulling the EarthAway from the water on this side.

The Moon is pulling the Water on this side.

TIDE

Spring tide – both the sun and moon pull on the ocean water (High tide is more extreme.)

Neap tide – the sun and the moon pull opposite of each other (High tide is less extreme.)

The Moon

Satellite – any natural or man-made object that revolves around a planet

The moon is a satellite of EarthEarth only has one satellite.Some planets have several, some

have none.

Luna – the name of the Earth’s moon

Facts about the Moon

Rocks from the moon have been found to be 4.6 billion years old.

The moon has no atmosphere, so there is no wind & no weather.

The surface therefore remains unchanged – Neil Armstrong’s footprint is still there!

The moon appears to be the largest object in our night sky, but that’s only b/c it’s the closest.

Facts about our Moon It is only ¼ the size of Earth. The sun is 400 times larger than the moon

even though the sun appears smaller in our sky.

The moon looks bright in the sky, but it does not give off its own light. The moon reflects light from the sun like a giant mirror.

We only see the same side of the moon b/c the moon rotates on its axis and revolves around the Earth at the same speed.

Phases of the Moon

The Moon seems to change shape as different parts of the moon are lit by the sun.

These are called phases of the moon.

Demonstration

Phases of the Moon Full Moon - when the moon's disk is light Gibbous Moon - when we can see roughly ¾ of the

moon's disk Quarter Moon – (half moon) when we can see one

half of the moon's disk (one-quarter of the entire moon's surface)

Crescent Moon - when we can see only a sliver of the moon's disk (the side of the moon facing us)

New Moon - when the moon's disk is dark (and invisible to us)

Waning Moon - when the moon seems to be getting smaller

Waxing Moon - when the moon seems to be getting bigger

Phases of the Moon

THE END

THANKING YOU