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Movements of Earth Chapter 26 section 2 Objectives • Describe several lines of evidence for Earth’s ___________________. • Explain how the change in the apparent positions of constellations provides evidence of Earth’s _______________________________. • Summarize how Earth’s rotation and revolution provide a basis for ______________________. • Explain how the ________________________ _________________________ cause seasons. The Rotating Earth • ______________- the spinning of Earth on its axis • How do we know? Evidence of Earth’s Rotation • Day & Night • Foucault Pendulum • Coriolis Effect The Revolving Earth • ________________- the motion of a body that travels around another body in space • The Earth travels around the sun at an average speed of 29.8 km/s. One complete revolution takes ____________ days. Definitions • ___________- the path that a body follows as it travels around another body in space • __________- a closed curve whose shape is determined by 2 points (foci) within the ellipse (__________________________) • _____________________- the point in an orbit where the planet is closest to the sun • _________________- the point in an orbit where the planet is farthest from the sun Constellations • _________________- a group of stars that are organized into a recognizable pattern • Evidence of rotation- constellations appear to change position over several _____________ • Evidence of revolution- constellations appear to change positions over several _____________ Constellations’ Motion Measuring Time • • • • Earth’s motion is the basis for measuring time. ___ rotation = ___ day = ____ hours ___ revolution = ___ year = _______ days ___ month used to be the time between successive full moons = _______ days, BUT the number of full moons in a year is not a whole number. A month is approximately __________of a year. Woops! • If 1 revolution = 365¼ days, where does the ¼ day go? • _____________- the year that contains 1 extra day every ___ years to account for the ¼ day. Created by Julius Caesar. The extra day was added to the shortest month (__________) by Augustus Caesar. The Modern Calendar • Developed by Pope Gregory XIII • Century years (1700, 1800, 1900, 2000, etc.) are NOT leap years unless they are evenly divisible by _________. Time Zones • _____________- the time when the sun is at its highest point in the sky BUT • Because of Earth’s rotation, the sun is at its highest point in different places at different times. SO • Earth’s surface is divided into ______ standard time zones Time Zones • Why 24? • • • • • The Earth is basically spherical. The circumference of a sphere = ______°. _____° ÷ ____ = ____° per time zone. Earth rotates at ____° per hour. The time in each zone is one hour earlier than in the zone to its east. International Date Line • ___________________________- line that runs from north to south through the Pacific Ocean where the date changes. • When it is ____________ west of the IDL, it is __________________ east of the IDL. Daylight Savings Time • ________________________________ - system where clocks are set 1 hour ahead of standard time during the summer months • Due to Earth’s tilt on its axis, ________ days are shorter than __________ days, DST gives us an extra hour of useable daylight and saves energy. • Equatorial countries do not use DST because they have ≈ _________________ all year round. The Seasons • Earth’s axis is tilted at _______°. The axis always point toward the north star. So, during revolution, the North Pole sometimes tilts _____________________ and sometimes tilts ____________. • Seasons are not determined by _________________________________. In fact, we are ___________ from the sun during our summer! Seasonal Weather • When the North Pole tilts _____________, the sun’s rays strike the Northern Hemisphere directly—what season is this? • When it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere, what season is it in the Southern Hemisphere? WHY? Equinoxes • During an equinox, the sun’s rays strike at a 90° angle along the equator. _________ ________________________________. • ___________________ - Sept. 22/23, marks the beginning of fall in the NH. • ______________________ - March 22/23, marks the beginning of spring in the NH. Summer Solstice • _______________- June 21/22, the North Pole is at its greatest tilt toward the sun. • It marks the beginning of _____________ in the NH. • Longest day of the year in the NH. • All areas of the globe above the Arctic Circle have _________________ daylight. Winter Solstice • _____________________ - Dec. 21/22, the North Pole is at its greatest tilt away from the sun. • Marks the beginning of ______________ in the NH. • Shortest day of the year in the NH. • All areas of the globe above the Arctic Circle have ________________ darkness. Objectives revisited • Describe several lines of evidence for Earth’s rotation. • Explain how the change in the apparent positions of constellations provides evidence of Earth’s rotation and revolution. • Summarize how Earth’s rotation and revolution provide a basis for measuring time. • Explain how the tilt of Earth’s axis and Earth’s movements cause seasons.