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Chapter 9 Tides Tides and the Earth’s Rotation Rise and fall of crust and water causes friction Like a hand on a spinning tire Causes day to lengthen 0.0015 s/century ○ 481 days/year 900 MYA Tides and the Moon’s Orbit Earth drags tidal bulges ahead of where they would be if the Earth weren’t spinning Causes Moon to accelerate, increasing its angular momentum, causing it to recede from the Earth about 3 cm/year The Moon’s Surface Observations from the Earth 1400s – Jan Van Eyck 1500s – Leonardo da Vinci 1609 – Galileo ○ Used telescopes ○ Two types of lunar terrain Maria – Meaning “seas”, dark areas Terrae – Meaning land, lighter, cratered regions The Moon’s Surface Exploration of the Moon 1957 ○ Soviets send Sputnik and scare US into the “Space Race” 1966 ○ First robot lander – sends pictures back 1969 ○ Apollo 11 lands on Moon – Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin 2020 ○ NASA plans to return to Moon Lunar Craters Formation of Craters ○ Meteors falling toward the Moon Regolith ○ Surface debris caused by impacts The Moon’s Surface Volcanic Features The Maria ○ Impact causes deep basin ○ Fracture allows magma to come up ○ Movement of dense material into fracture creates a mass called a mascon Sinous Rilles ○ Sinous (winding) – looks like a dried riverbed ○ Straight Lunar Samples Chemical Composition Very similar elements to the Earth More abundant: Al, Ti, U Less abundant: Na, Cl, Zn, Pb Ages of Lunar Samples Oldest are 4.5 billion Most are younger ○ Magma flooded, eruptions occurred until 3.2 billion years ago (not much rock formation since) Lunar Samples Ages and Cratering Crater Density – craters per given amount of lunar surface Crater Saturation – New impacts would destroy the same amount it creates History of the Lunar Surface ○ Uses density, rate of crater formation ○ Surface has been quite stable for last 3.2 billion years aside from heavier cratered maria Crater Densities on Other Planets and Satellites ○ Based on crater densities ○ Can not do radioactive dating The Moon’s Atmosphere Density Almost no atmosphere Mostly He, Ne, Ar, H Temperature from -280°C to 260°C due to poor insulation Planets and stars always visible due to dark sky Gain and Loss of Gases Gain ○ H, He due to solar winds Loss ○ He, Ar due to radioactive decay of rocks Water from comets vaporizes then reforms at poles The Moon’s Interior Mass Determined by orbital period and distance of satellites around Moon Found to be 1/81 the mass of Earth Density of the Moon Less dense than Earth Near density of Earth’s crust Possibly came from same material Lunar Seismology and Internal Structure Used to probe interior of the Moon Four seismometers placed during Apollo landings Thicker on far side of the Moon Heat flow much lower as well The Origin of the Moon Fission, Accretion, Capture Fission Theory ○ Idea: Moon and Earth were one, but Moon broke off ○ Good: Explains how Moon is similar to Earth’s crust ○ Bad: Assumption that Earth rotated fast enough to fling Moon off of it Binary Accretion Theory ○ Idea: Moon and Earth formed at same time ○ Good: Formation from same material explains similarity of material on both ○ Bad: Abundance of iron is too different for this to work Capture Theory ○ Idea: Moon formed elsewhere in solar system but captured by Earth’s gravity ○ Good: Explains differences in materials on both ○ Bad: Moon would have gone past too quickly ○ Bad: Can’t explain similarities in chemical composition of the Moon and Earth Origin of the Moon Giant Impact Theory Gaining wide acceptance in past 25 years Idea: Moon formed from debris when Earth was struck by a body larger than Mars which cooled and orbited Earth Good: Accounts for similarities AND differences between Earth and Moon Activity Create a blueprint for a lunar base Be sure to include all necessary facilities for human life to exist for a long period of time Write out a description for each part of the lunar base