The
Moon
The
Moon is the sole natural satellite of the Earth. Like all the planets
and satellites in the Solar System, the Moon shines by reflected sunlight.
It revolves around the Earth from west to east at a distance of about
384,400 km. With a diameter of 3,476 km, the Moon is less than one-third
the size of the Earth, is only 1/81 as massive as the Earth and has
a density of roughly 3.34 g/cm3, compared to 5.52 g/cm3
for the Earth.
The combined effect of its mass and size gives the Moon a gravity on
its surface of 1/6 of the Earth's. This is not enough for the Moon to
retain an atmosphere, and so liquid water cannot exist on the Moon.
However, in recent years, we have seen evidence that suggests that water
ice may exist at the Moon's poles, in regions that sunlight can never
reach.
The lack of an atmosphere means that the temperature on the surface
of the Moon varies greatly from day to night. During the day, temperatures
rise above 100°C, the boiling point of water on Earth, while at
night they fall to temperatures lower than would be experienced in Antarctica
in midwinter.
Captured Rotation
The Moon rotates about its own axis every 27.32
days. This is the same time that it takes to orbit the Earth! This is
no coincidence: the Moon is said to be in "captured rotation",
or "synchronous rotation". There is no doubt that the Moon
originally rotated more rapidly but, over a long period of time, the
differences in shape and mass distribution on the Moon have slowed its
rotation so that its rotation and revolution periods are the same. As
a result, the Moon always presents the same face to the Earth.
The situation can be likened to attaching a string to one side of a
ball, and then swinging it around your head: the ball will always keep
the same face toward you, and you will never see the other side.
With respect to the Sun, however, the Moon rotates every 29.53 days.
This period corresponds to a complete lunar "day". The difference
comes about because of the motion of the Earth-Moon system around the
Sun while the Moon is revolving around us. The Moon must move around
its orbit for a little over two more days for the same part of the Moon
to face the Sun again. Therefore, daylight on the Moon lasts a little
over two Earth weeks, as does a lunar night!
Surface features
The surface of the Moon has been viewed through telescopes from the
time of Galileo's first observation in 1609. The three main visible
features are the craters, light highland areas and the dark "maria".
In 1651, the Italian Jesuit astronomer Giovanni B. Riccioli described
the dark areas on the Moon as seas of water, with names such as Mare
Imbrium ("Sea of Showers") and Mare Nectaris ("Sea of
Nectar"). These names continue to be used today even though we
know now that the Moon is completely devoid of liquid surface water.
The
craters, which measure up to 200 km in diameter, are found all over
the surface; many can be seen even using binoculars. In the past there
was much debate as to whether their origin is volcanic or related to
bombardment by impacting bodies. However, we now have sufficient evidence
that the Moon's surface has been shaped primarily by impacts. Indeed,
the individual craters that we see today are likely to be all, or almost
all, of impact origin.
The darker areas of the Moon, the "maria", have fewer craters
and are thought to be huge lava flows that have spread over an area,
destroying the craters that had already been formed. Another type of
feature is the rille, a deep trench that may extend several hundred
kilometres. Rilles tend to occur in groups within mountain ranges bordering
maria or craters.
Origin
of the Moon
Most scientists favour the giant-impact hypothesis. According to this
theory, a Mars-sized body struck the proto-Earth early in the history
of the Solar System. As a result, a cloud of fragments was ejected into
orbit around the Earth, later accreting into the Moon.
Prior to the collision, the proto-Earth and the other Mars-sized body
had already formed metallic cores and silicate-rich mantles. Upon collision,
the higher density metallic cores coalesced to form the Earth's core,
with lower density silicates forming the outer part of the Earth or
being ejected into space to eventually either fall back to Earth, collide
with other nearby planets, or form the Moon.
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