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  • What is Astronomy?
  • One Tiny Speck ...
  • Our Solar System
  • Many Kinds of Stars
  • Constellations
  • Universal Birth
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  • Moon


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  • Introduction
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  • Star Birth
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  • Our Solar System: the Moon

    the Moon
    the Moon
    (Courtesy to Microsoft Encarta for this photograph.)

    The Moon is very similar to our own planet Earth. It has many of the same materials as Earth does, and it also has some materials that are not found on Earth. The Moon is also a history book of Earth because whatever happens to the Moon also happens to the Earth. Scientists have sent many missions to the Moon to retrieve samples of rock so that they can study the Moon and in turn, studying the Earth. As they learn more about the Moon, scientists discovered why some of the material amounts were different on the different places. They came up with a theory that told of a Mars sized object colliding with Earth when the Earth was still all molten lava. Both of the planets' surfaces melted and afterwards created a rings of small moons around Earth. These small moons collided and eventually became the moon we now see today in our sky.

    Many different times people sent space probes to the Moon. This was first started by the former Soviet Union in the 1950s. This was what began the "Space Race." The Soviet Union had already sent somebody into space, Yuri Gagarin, before the United States did. With John F. Kennedy as president, he wanted people to go to the Moon as their ultimate goal. At that time NASA created many missions to space in preparation for the Apollo missions. Apollo 11 was the first landing on the Moon that involved humans in it. This started a whole new revolution of space exploration.

    As we watch the Moon go around Earth, we only see one face of it. This face of the Moon goes in cycles that we now know as phases. People based their planting cycles and sometimes their calendars around the lunar phases. This is because the lunar phases repeat approximately every month. There are many different phases of the Moon, but the seven most prominent are listed below with a picture to go along with it.

    PhaseExample Image
    New MoonNew Moon
    Waxing CrescentWaxing Crescent
    First QuarterFirst Quarter
    Waxing GibbousWaxing Gibbous
    Full MoonFull Moon
    Waning CrescentWaning Crescent
    Last QuarterLast Quarter
    Waning GibbousWaning Gibbous

    Other Information:

    Age: 4.6 billion years
    Size: Diameter is 2,160 miles
    Atmosphere: Little or no atmosphere.
    Distance from Earth: 384,403 km. (2160 mi.)
    Temperature (at Equatorial Maria): -173° C* to 127° C* (-280° F* to 280° F**)
    Orbit Around Earth/Rotation (Earth Measurements): 27 days, 7 hours, 43 minutes/27 days, 7 hours, 43 minutes
    * = Moon Night ** = Sun at Zenith

    Click here to continue on to the next lesson (Many Different Kinds of Stars).
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