Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Moon

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Moon  Moon symbol
Full moon
A full moon as seen from Earth's northern hemisphere
Designations
Adjective Lunar
Perigee 363,104 km  (0.002 4 AU)
Apogee 405,696 km  (0.002 7 AU)
Semi-major axis 384,399 km  (0.002 57 AU[1])
Eccentricity 0.054 9[1]
Orbital period 27.321 582 d  (27 d 7 h 43.1 min[1])
Synodic period 29.530 589 d  (29 d 12 h 44 min 2.9 s)
Average orbital speed 1.022 km/s
Inclination 5.145° to the ecliptic[1]
(between 18.29° and 28.58° to Earth's equator)
Longitude of ascending node regressing by one revolution in 18.6 years
Argument of perigee progressing by one revolution in 8.85 years
Satellite of Earth
Physical characteristics
Mean radius 1,737.10 km  (0.273 Earths)[1][2]
Equatorial radius 1,738.14 km  (0.273 Earths)[2]
Polar radius 1,735.97 km  (0.273 Earths)[2]
Flattening 0.001 25
Circumference 10,921 km (equatorial)
Surface area 3.793 × 107 km²  (0.074 Earths)
Volume 2.195 8 × 1010 k  (0.020 Earths)
Mass 7.347 7 × 1022 kg  (0.012 3 Earths[1])
Mean density 3,346.4 kg/m³[1]
Equatorial surface gravity 1.622 m/s² (0.165 4 g)
Escape velocity 2.38 km/s
Sidereal rotation
period
27.321 582 d (synchronous)
Equatorial rotation velocity 4.627 m/s
Axial tilt 1.542 4° (to ecliptic)
6.687° (to orbit plane)
Albedo 0.12
Surface temp.
   equator
   85°N[3]
min mean max
100 K 220 K 390 K
70 K 130 K 230 K
Apparent magnitude −2.5 to −12.9[nb 1]
−12.74 (mean full moon)[2]
Angular diameter 29.3 to 34.1 arcminutes[2][nb 2]

Some details of the Earth-Moon system. Besides the radius of each object, the radius to the Earth-Moon barycenter is shown. Photos from NASA. Data from NASA. Planets are not spheres and orbits are not circles, so radii values are only indicative (and not drawn to scale). The Moon's orbital plane precesses about the Earth in an 18.6 year cycle. Its axis is located by Cassini's third law.

The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite and the fifth largest satellite in the Solar System. The average centre-to-centre distance from the Earth to the Moon is 384,403 kilometres (238,857 mi), about thirty times the diameter of the Earth. The common centre of mass of the system (the barycentre) is located at about 1,700 kilometres (1,100 mi)—a quarter the Earth's radius—beneath the surface of the Earth. The Moon makes a complete orbit around the Earth every 27.3 days[nb 3] (the orbital period), and the periodic variations in the geometry of the Earth–Moon–Sun system are responsible for the phases of the moon, which repeat every 29.5 days[nb 4] (the synodic period).

The Moon's diameter is 3,474 kilometres (2,159 mi),[4] a little more than a quarter of that of the Earth. Thus, the Moon's surface area is less than a tenth that of the Earth (about a quarter the Earth's land area, approximately as large as Russia, Canada, and the United States combined), and its volume is about 2 percent that of Earth. The pull of gravity at its surface is about 17 percent of that at the Earth's surface.

The Moon is the only celestial body to which human beings have performed a manned landing. While the Soviet Union's Luna programme was the first to reach the Moon with unmanned spacecraft, the NASA Apollo program achieved the only manned missions to date, beginning with the first manned lunar mission by Apollo 8 in 1968, and six manned lunar landings between 1969 and 1972- the first being Apollo 11 in 1969. Human exploration of the Moon temporarily ceased with the conclusion of the Apollo program, although a few robotic landers and orbiters have been sent to the Moon since that time. The U.S. has committed to return to the moon by 2018.[5][6][7]

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