Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

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Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17

Transcript of Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Page 1: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17

Page 2: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Crescent Moon

Page 3: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Quarter Moon

Page 4: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

GibbousMoon

Page 5: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Full Moon

Page 6: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The moon’s diameter is about ¼ or 25% of the earth’s.

So, if the earth is about 13,000 km in diameter, the moon is about 3,250 km

Page 7: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The moon is about 384,000 km from the earth.

So, you could say that the moon is about 30 “earths” away from earth.

Page 8: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The BARYCENTER of the earth-moon system is much closer to the earth

than the moon.

The BARYCENTER is theCENTER OF GRAVITY between the

Earth and the Moon.

Page 9: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Galileo Galilee

1609

Page 10: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Galileo Galilee

1609

Page 11: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

maria

terrae

(dark because

of volcanic activity)

Page 12: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Craters on the Moon are caused by falling comets and asteroids.

Page 13: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The diameter of the crater is usually 5 to 10 times the diameter of the

impacting body.

Page 14: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.
Page 15: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The RAYS that surround some craters are probably caused by the lighter

color of the material ejected during an impact.

Page 16: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.
Page 17: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

RILLES are formations that can either be straight or winding.

Page 18: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The rilles were probably caused by volcanic activity.

Page 19: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Is there any volcanic activity (volcanism) on the moon today?

Probably not.

Page 20: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

lunar basalt

Page 21: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

anorthosite

Page 22: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

breccia

Page 23: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

tektites

Page 24: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.
Page 25: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

How does the moon cause tides?

HIGH TIDE LOW TIDE

Page 26: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The Moon has much less

atmosphere than Earth

because, due to the moon’s weak gravity, gases escape as quickly as

they’re caught.

Page 27: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

Four partsOf the Moon’sInterior:

1)Core2)Partially

MoltenRegion

3) Lithosphere4) Crust

Page 28: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The FISSION theory of moon origin:

The moon was once part of the earth, but it broke away because the earth

once rotated very rapidly.

Page 29: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The ACCRETION theory of moon origin:

The moon formed in orbit around the earth, but not out of material drawn

from the earth.

The CAPTURE theory of moon origin:

The moon formed elsewhere in the solar system and was captured by the

earth during a close encounter.

Page 30: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The GIANT IMPACT theory ofmoon origin

The theory that is now the most widely accepted

Page 31: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The GIANT IMPACT theory ofmoon origin:

Page 32: Photo taken near the landing site of Apollo 17. Crescent Moon.

The GIANT IMPACT theory ofmoon origin:The GIANT IMPACT Theory states that,

when the young earth was forming, an extremely massive object struck the Earth, shooting debris into space. Some of this debris collected to form the Moon.