00:38
The illustration may look a little complex
at first, but it's easy to explain.
Sunlight is shown coming in from the
right. The earth, of course, is at the center of the diagram. The moon is shown
at 8 key stages during its revolution around the earth. The moon phase name is
shown alongside the image. The dotted line from the earth to the moon
represents your line of sight when looking at the moon. The large moon
image shows what you would see at that point in the cycle. For the waning
gibbous, third quarter, and waning crescent phases you have to mentally turn
yourself upside down when imagining the line of sight. When you do this,
you'll "see" that the illuminated portion is on your left, just as
you see in the large image.
One important thing to notice is that
exactly one half of the moon is always illuminated by the sun. Of
course that is perfectly logical, but you need to visualize it in order to
understand the phases. At certain times we see both the sunlit
portion and the shadowed portion -- and that creates the various moon phase
shapes we are all familiar with. Also note that the shadowed part of the moon
is invisible to the naked eye; in the diagram above, it is only shown for
clarification purposes.
So the basic explanation is that the lunar
phases are created by changing angles (relative positions) of the earth, the
moon and the sun, as the moon orbits the earth. If you'd like to examine the
phases of the moon more closely, via computer software, you may be interested
in this moon phases
calendar software.
Moon Phases Simplified:
It's probably easiest to understand the
moon cycle in this order: new moon and full moon, first quarter and third
quarter, and the phases in between. As shown in the above diagram, the new
moon occurs when the moon is positioned between the earth and
sun. The three objects are in approximate alignment (why
"approximate" is explained below). The entire illuminated portion of
the moon is on the back side of the moon, the half that we cannot see. At a full
moon, the earth, moon, and sun are in approximate alignment, just as the new
moon, but the moon is on the opposite side of the earth, so the entire sunlit
part of the moon is facing us. The shadowed portion is entirely hidden from
view. The first quarter and third quarter moons (both often
called a "half moon"), happen when the moon is at a 90 degree angle
with respect to the earth and sun. So we are seeing exactly half of the moon
illuminated and half in shadow.
Once you understand those four key moon
phases, the phases between should be fairly easy to visualize, as the
illuminated portion gradually transitions between them.
An easy way to remember and understand
those "between" lunar phase names is by breaking out and defining 4
words: crescent, gibbous, waxing, and waning. The word crescent refers
to the phases where the moon is less than half illuminated. The word gibbous refers
to phases where the moon is more than half illuminated. Waxing essentially
means "growing" or expanding in illumination, and waning means
"shrinking" or decreasing in illumination.
Thus you can simply combine the two words
to create the phase name, as follows:
After the new moon, the sunlit portion is
increasing, but less than half, so it is waxing crescent. After the first
quarter, the sunlit portion is still increasing, but now it is more than
half, so it iswaxing gibbous. After the full moon (maximum illumination), the
light continually decreases. So the waning gibbous phase occurs next.
Following the third quarter is the waning crescent, which wanes until the
light is completely gone -- a new moon.
0 التعليقات:
Post a Comment