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[PS] Were over the Moon for well, for the Moon!
The Planetary Society Articles /////////////////////////////////////////// Were over the Moon for well, for the Moon! Posted: 25 Sep 2020 07:30 AM PDT https://www.planetary.org/the-downli...l-for-the-moon Everything you need to celebrate the Moon this week, plus a way you can help NASA thrive in 2021. /////////////////////////////////////////// Can the Moon be upside down? Posted: 25 Sep 2020 12:00 AM PDT https://www.planetary.org/articles/c...be-upside-down When you think about how the Moon looks in the night sky, you might never have considered that it looks different to people in other parts of the world. But really, perspective is all relative. |
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[PS] Were over the Moon for well, for the Moon!
Thank you for forwarding the story about "Can the Moon be upside down?"
I had never given much thought to what the moon looks like in the southern hemisphere since I haven't been south of the equator. I need to get out more! Dave |
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[PS] Were over the Moon for well, for the Moon!
On Sep/26/2020 at 23:01, David Spain wrote :
Thank you for forwarding the story about "Can the Moon be upside down?" I had never given much thought to what the moon looks like in the southern hemisphere since I haven't been south of the equator. I need to get out more! Dave I would like to add that in my opinion, the most striking difference that can be seen in the appearance of the moon is not, as the planetary society article seems to imply, the difference between the full moon seen from the north pole compared to the full moon seen from the south pole. Yes, the craters aren't in the same orientation, but most people hardly notice the craters on the moon. On the other hand, if at a the equator on an equinox, you look at a half moon as it rises or sets near the horizon. The half of the moon that is lit is the half facing the sun. A half moon rises or sets at midnight (the waning half moon rises at midnight, the waxing half moon sets at midnight). So when you see the half moon rising or setting, the sun is straight below your feet and the half of the moon that is lit up, is the half of the moon near the ground and the terminator is horizontal. If at the same time someone at the pole looks at the half moon, he will see the terminator 90 degrees from what is seen at the equator. At the pole, the half moon is shaped like a D (waxing moon at the north pole or waning moon at the south pole) or like an inverted D, or if you prefer a closed C (waning moon at the north pole or waxing moon at the south pole). If you aren't quite at the pole but either north or south of the tropics, the rising half moon might not have a vertical terminator but it won't be horizontal. The closer you go to a pole the more upright the half moon will look. At the December solstice on the Tropic of Cancer (23.4 deg north) at midnight, the sun is straight below your feet, and you might see a half moon rise much the same way it would be seen at the equator on the equinox. But at the June solstice, at midnight, the sun is not straight below your feet, it is pointed in a direction straight below the feet of someone at the Tropic of Capricorn which is a direction nearly 47 degrees from straight below your the feet of the person on the Tropic of Cancer at midnight. So someone living near the arctic circle going to the tropic of Cancer at the June solstice might no be amazed to see the moon at such an angle, it is what he is used to see at the December solstice. On the other hand if he goes there at the December solstice he might see the half moon terminator horizontal which is much different from what he usually sees. At the arctic circle, he sees a terminator going from completely vertical at the June solstice to slanted 47 degrees at the December solstice. So for someone living in mid latitudes in the northern hemisphere if you want to see an unusual moon, you want to go north in June, to see the moon more upright, or south in December to see the moon more slanted. In the southern hemisphere you move north in December or south in June. Just a few thousand kilometres should give a noticeable difference. Alain Fournier |
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[PS] Were over the Moon for well, for the Moon!
On Sep/26/2020 at 23:01, David Spain wrote :
Thank you for forwarding the story about "Can the Moon be upside down?" I had never given much thought to what the moon looks like in the southern hemisphere since I haven't been south of the equator. I need to get out more! Dave You don't even have to go south of the equator to see a difference. If you go from say northern Quebec to Cuba, there is an easily noticeable difference. But you see, you don't really have to get out more, following sci.space.science suffices. Alain Fournier |
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