Besides rising and setting, casual observation of the moon shows that it is invo
ID: 1336925 • Letter: B
Question
Besides rising and setting, casual observation of the moon shows that it is involved in another motion in the sky. Describe how you* would detect this motion in nature. Your answer should discuss an experimental design (words/drawing) that would quantify the observed motion. Express your answer as an angular velocity statement. *Note: Do not consult a book answer.
A finger held at arm's length is about four times the apparent width of the moon or sun. Since both of these objects cover about half a degree of sky, one finger corresponds to an angle of about 2o. A fist (with the thumb held outside) will cover an angle of 100. We'll call this angle a fist. A spread hand--from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the little finger, again at arm's length, covers about twice the angle of a "fist", or about 20o. Let's call this angle a span. With the help of fingers, fists and spans, it is relatively easy to estimate angular distances in the sky. More information about this can be found at:
http://oneminuteastronomer.com/860/measuring-sky/
Solution Description:
1) Moon’s velocity =_______________ degrees/day
2) How long will it take for the moon to orbit the earth? ________________
(Show work)
3) Why do you have to report this observation as an angular measurement?
Explanation / Answer
The moon is moving around the Earth in appproximately in a circular orbit, going once around us in a 27.3 days.
One circle is 360 degrees.
So the moon moves, 360/27.3 or 13.2 degrees per day
It is about 27.3 days to complete 1 orbital movement for the moon around EArth. It also takes approximately 27 days for the moon to rotate in its own axis. As a result for the observers from Earth looks like moon is still. Scientists call it as synchronous rotation.
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