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General Science => Question of the Week => Topic started by: thedoc on 12/10/2010 16:52:37

Title: QotW - 10.10.10 - When there is a new moon in England , What do Aussies See?
Post by: thedoc on 12/10/2010 16:52:37
When there is a new moon in England , is the moon in Australia the same or because this country is on the other side of the world from us, is the moon either a day earlier or a day later, quite full?
Asked by Sally, Halifax


                                       

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Title: QotW - 10.10.10 - When there is a new moon in England , What do Aussies See?
Post by: thedoc on 12/10/2010 16:52:37
We put this to Dr Dominic Ford from the Department of Physics at the  University of Cambridge, also familiar to listeners of the Naked  Astronomy Podcast...
Dominic -   One thing which often surprises people when they travel long distances is that the Moon appears in different orientations from different places on the Earth.  So for example, from the UK, you might see a crescent Moon on the left side of the Moon,  on the equator you might see a smiley face with the bottom of the Moon illuminated and then from Australia, you might see a crescent on the right hand side.  That’s because the Earth is curved and so different people have a different sense of what direction is up and the whole sky appears rotated.  But although the Moon can appear rotated, it tends to appear with the same phase, that is the same amount of the Moon’s disk is illuminated, from any place on the Earth.  That comes down to where the Moon’s phases actually come from, which is the orbit of the Moon about the Earth. 
[img float=right]/forum/copies/RTEmagicC_dana1_moon_image_04.jpg.jpg[/img]The Moon orbits once every 29 days around the Earth and at one point in the month, the Moon will appear quite close to the Sun and we will see the back face which isn’t illuminated by the Sun, and that’s a new Moon when you can't see the illuminated disk of the Moon.  Two weeks later when the Moon has gone halfway around the Earth, we see the same side of the Moon which is being illuminated by the Sun and we see a full Moon.  And so, the simple answer is that the phases of the Moon come down to the orbit at the Moon about the Earth, not where you are on the Earth, and so it is exactly the same time wherever you are.
Diana -   The Moon should appear to be the same no matter where you are on the Earth if slightly rotated, but surely, that’s too easy...
Dominic -   The slightly more complicated answer is that as you move around on the Earth, you're seeing an ever so slightly different face of the Moon.  Imagine that you're holding an orange in front of your face and you move your head a few centimetres from side to side, you see a little way around the left or the right side of the orange.
The same thing happens moving around on the Earth, but the Moon is a very long way away.  It’s 400,000 kilometres away.  The Earth is only 6,000 kilometres across.  And so, you can only see about 1 degree around either side of the Moon.  But that does mean that when one person sees the Moon being totally illuminated, another person will see 1 degree around the unilluminated side of the Moon.  And so that leads to a difference of about an hour and a half in when people see the Moon being completely full.  You need a very good telescope to see that and it’d be a very challenging observation, but there is a very small difference there.
Diana -   One vantage point might allow you to see a tiny bit of the Moon which other people can't.  Even the exact times of Moon phases given by calendars are calculated as if one was standing right in the centre of Earth with the 5 ½ thousand degree iron-nickel core around you.  I don't think you'd see much of the night sky from there.
Title: QotW - 10.10.10 - When there is a new moon in England , What do Aussies See?
Post by: donchiragjain10036 on 05/10/2010 18:55:13
A new moon!! ( The same as the people of england see)

England is on the Northern Hemisphere approximately equally away from the equator as Australia is from the equator.
Title: QotW - 10.10.10 - When there is a new moon in England , What do Aussies See?
Post by: JP on 06/10/2010 07:34:45
A new moon!! ( The same as the people of england see)

I agree.  Otherwise you'd need a different lunar calendar for different places on earth, which isn't the case!

More scientifically, the moon phases have to do with the positions of the earth, moon and sun in space.  The sun lights up half of the moon and if we can see that entire bright half, we see a full moon, if we see none of it, we see a new moon, etc.  The earth rotates much more quickly than the relative positions of the earth, moon and sun change, so that Australia and England will see essentially the same phases of the moon on the same day.
Title: QotW - 10.10.10 - When there is a new moon in England , What do Aussies See?
Post by: RD on 07/10/2010 14:50:32
Delay between observations in UK and Oz would mean that the phase (amount of moon illuminated) would not be exactly the same …

Quote
If however the moon is visible in Britain, but still below the horizon in Australia, then the phase will have very slightly changed by the time the moon rises in Australia.
http://ukqna.com/science/1060-science-ukqna.html
Title: None
Post by: namron on 20/07/2014 03:27:22
There is an error in the numbers above, the earth's radius is probably 6,000 km not it's diameter 12,000 km would be closer ... I sound a bit uncertain because I more often use the English measurements ... 8,000 mi in diamter which would be 2.45 * 8,000mi I believe. Anyway, 6,000km is clearly off as a diameter.

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