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Back Lesson Print Name Class Date Skills Worksheet Directed Reading A Section: Moons 1. Natural or artificial bodies that revolve around larger bodies such as planets are called . 2. Except for Mercury and Venus, all of the planets have natural satellites called . 3. What is the difference between a moon and a satellite? LUNA: THE MOON OF EARTH ______ 4. How old were the lunar rocks brought back by the Apollo missions? a. 3 billion years b. about 3.8 billion years c. about 4.6 billion years d. more than 5 billion years 5. What does the age of these rocks tell us about our solar system? 6. What happens to impacts on the surface of bodies without an atmosphere? 7. What were the three popular explanations for the moon’s formation? 8. What is the current theory about the origin of the moon? Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. Holt Science and Technology 10 A Family of Planets Back Lesson Print Name Class Date Directed Reading A continued 9. What evidence supports the current theory about the origin of the Moon? 10. Describe how the moon’s appearance changes during the month. 11. The different appearances of the moon due to its changing position are called . 12. What causes the different appearances of the moon? 13. Why do we always see the same side of the moon from Earth? 14. When the moon is , the sunlit part of the moon that we can see is getting larger. When the moon is the sunlit part of the moon that we can see is getting smaller. Match the correct description with the correct term. Write the letter in the space provided. a. eclipse ______15. when the moon’s shadow falls on part of the Earth b. solar eclipse ______16. when the shadow of Earth falls on the moon c. lunar eclipse ______ 17. when shadow of one celestial body falls on another d. total solar eclipse e. annular eclipse ______18. when a thin solar ring is visible around the edge of the moon ______19. when the moon’s disk completely covers the sun 20. Why don’t we see solar and lunar eclipses every month? Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. Holt Science and Technology 11 A Family of Planets Back Lesson Print Name Class Date Directed Reading A continued THE MOONS OF OTHER PLANETS ______21. Which of the following statements about moons in this solar system is NOT correct? a. Some orbit their planet backwards. b. Many may be captured asteroids. c. Some have very elongated orbits. d. None is as large as the terrestrial planets. ______22. Why do scientists think the Martian moons may be asteroids caught by the planet’s gravity? a. They are very small moons. c. They are similar in composition. b. They are very dark. d. They are oddly shaped. ______23. Who discovered the four largest moons of Jupiter? a. Copernicus c. Ganymede b. Galileo d. Mercury 24. Why is Io the most volcanically active body in the solar system? 25. What evidence supports the idea that life could have evolved on Europa? 26. Why might Titan hold the key to learning more about the origin of life? 27. Uranus’s moon, Miranda, has a surface that is a patchwork of , , and . 28. Neptune’s largest moon, Triton, has a , or “backward,” orbit. 29. Pluto’s moon, Charon, has a period of revolution of about days, and eclipses Pluto once every years. Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. Holt Science and Technology 12 A Family of Planets Back Lesson Print PAGE TEACHER RESOURCE 13. Early in its history, Uranus may have 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. been struck by a massive object that tipped it over on its side. D Great Dark Spot A release of thermal energy causes the warm gases to rise and the cool gases to sink, and produces wind patterns that create the belts of clouds. A B D C nitrogen, water Charon is more than half the size of Pluto. Pluto is so small and unusual compared with the rest of the outer planets. It is more like a large asteroid or comet. SECTION: MOONS 1. satellites 2. moons 3. A moon is always natural, but a 12. These are caused by the changing 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. satellite can be artificial. 4. C 5. Since the rocks seem to be unchanged 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. since they were formed, the solar system must be about the same age. Without an atmosphere, they are preserved unchanged. One explanation is that the moon was a separate body captured by Earth’s gravity. A second explanation is that the moon formed at the same time and from the same materials as the Earth. The third explanation is that the newly formed Earth was spinning so fast that a piece flew off and became the moon. The current theory is that a large Mars-sized object collided with Earth. Part of the Earth’s mantle was blasted into orbit around the Earth to form the moon. The composition of the moon rocks is very similar to the Earth’s mantle. The moon changes from a dark unlit face to a thin crescent, to a half circle to a fully lit circle, down to a thin crescent, and back to the dark face again. phases 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. positions of the moon relative to the sun and the Earth. As the moon revolves around Earth, the amount of the sunlit portion of the moon visible from Earth changes. Because the moon’s period of rotation is the same as its period of revolution. waxing; waning B C A E D The moon’s orbit around Earth is tilted with respect to Earth’s orbit around the sun. Thus, the moon usually passes above or below Earth’s shadow. D C B Io is constantly being tugged at by the gravitational tug of war between the planet Jupiter and its nearest neighbor, Europa. This causes Io to heat up, resulting in eruptions. Recent pictures show that Europa appears to have oceans of liquid water beneath its frozen surface. It is possible that life may have evolved in these subterranean oceans. Titan’s atmosphere is thought to be similar in composition to the early Earth, when life first evolved here. plains, grooves, cliffs retrograde 6.4, 120 SECTION: SMALL BODIES IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM 1. Answers will vary but should include comets, asteroids, and meteoroids. 2. B 3. Largely, because of their composition: rock, ice, and cosmic dust 4. These bodies are leftovers from the time the planets formed. Each one is a sample of that early solar system. Their composition can provide information on the history of our solar system. 5. ion tail, dust tail 6. nucleus Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. Holt Science and Technology 122 A Family of Planets