Phases of the Moon: Astronomy and Space for Kids - FreeSchool - YouTube

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It's the brightest and most noticeable object in the night sky, but if you spend much time
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observing it, you will see that the moon is never quite the same from one night to the
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next.
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The moon has something we call 'phases,' which means that it appears to change shape a little
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bit every night. To understand why this happens, we need to talk a little bit about the way
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the Earth and the moon move together in space.
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The moon orbits around the Earth, much like the Earth orbits the sun. However, while the
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Earth takes about 365 days to travel once around the sun - one year - the moon completes
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its orbit around the Earth in only 29 and a half days - or about one month.
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That's actually where the idea of months came from - the time it takes for the moon to complete
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one orbit around the Earth - and the words 'moon' and 'month' come from the same root.
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Despite how bright it looks in the sky, the moon does not have any light of its own. It
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only appears to shine brightly in the sky because light from the sun hits it and bounces
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off. Just like the Earth, the moon has a day side and a night side, with half of it in
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sunlight and half of it in darkness at any one time. As the moon travels through its
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orbit around the Earth, that dividing line between day and night, called the terminator,
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is visible from different angles, giving the impression that different amounts of the moon
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are lit up on different days.
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The cycle of lunar phases begins with the 'new moon.' At new moon, the moon appears
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completely dark because the unlit side is facing the Earth. New moon is the only time
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in the lunar cycle when a solar eclipse could happen, because it is the only time that the
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moon is between the sun and the Earth.
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After a few days, once the moon has moved along a little in its orbit, we can begin
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to see some of the moon's day side from Earth. What we see is just a thin slice of light,
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called a crescent. We call it a 'waxing crescent,' because 'waxing' means 'growing.' The crescent
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moon will grow a little bit thicker every night until it reaches the next phase: first
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quarter.
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The first quarter moon is sometimes called the half moon because it appears to us that
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half of the moon is illuminated, but it is called 'first quarter' because the moon is
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one-quarter of the way through its cycle.
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As the days pass, the moon continues to grow, soon entering its next phase, the waxing gibbous.
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Gibbous means 'humped' or 'swollen,' and again, we call it waxing because it grows thicker
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every night until it reaches the next phase, the full moon.
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A full moon is the biggest, brightest, and easiest phase of the moon to see. The moon
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rises at sunset and is up all night, so if you are outside and the sky is clear, it's
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hard to miss. The moon is halfway through its orbit around the Earth, and is now on
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the opposite side of the Earth from the sun. During a full moon is the only time that a
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lunar eclipse can happen, because that is the only time that the Earth's shadow could
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fall on the moon.
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As the moon continues in its path, it appears to shrink again as we begin to see more and
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more of its dark side. A few days after the full moon the moon will be a gibbous again,
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but this time it's a waning gibbous. 'Waning' means shrinking, or getting smaller, and so
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the moon will be waning for the rest of its orbit.
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The next phase is another half moon, but this time it's called 'third quarter' or sometimes
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'last' or 'final' quarter, because the moon is three-quarters of the way through its orbit.
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Soon the half moon shrinks into a waning crescent, which will continue to shrink night after
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night until it vanishes completely into the next new moon.
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Big and bright and beautiful, different every night but repeating the same cycle over and
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over, the moon is one of the best objects in the sky to observe, especially for someone
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just getting started. The next time you look up and see the moon in the sky, take a moment
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and see if you can identify which phase of the moon you're seeing, and try to figure
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out which one will come next.