LUNAR OBSERVATION LAB
The Global Features of
the Moon
Definitions
Terminator – The line that
separates the bright side of the Moon from the dark side
Limb – any place near the edge of the moon
A) Start by looking carefully at the surface of the Moon. Describe what you
see. On first glance you will likely notice features on the lunar surface.
This is good, but on longer inspection you will begin to notice that the
Lunar surface is not a uniform place. Make notes about non-uniformity (how
one place differs from another).
B) Next compare how bright the Moon looks at different locations. Do the
following comparisons.
1) The brightness of the limb of the
Moon compared to the brightness near the terminator.
What is causing the difference in brightness?
2) The brightness of different regions on the surface.
What can you come up with for why various areas
have different brightnesses?
Now combine what you find for 1) and 2)
and generate a single conjecture on what affects the brightness of the Moon.
C) Now look with some detail at the craters on the Moon.
1) Where on the surface do you see the
greatest detail in the craters? In other words, where do the craters look
the most 3-D. Explain what is causing this effect.
2) By looking at craters in different locations on the surface of the Moon
you can actually tell that the Moon is a round sphere, and not flat. Make
this observation and explain how it tells you the Moon is round.
3) If you were standing on the terminator of the Moon, where would the Sun
be in your sky? Where would the Sun be in about a week?
D) The whiter areas on the Moon are called the Lunar Highlands. The darker
area is known as Mare (which means Sea) the plural of Mare is Maria.
1) Compare the highlands and
the Maria. How are they different?
2) Try to look carefully at the Maria and see if you can find evidence of
what the Maria is. In other words, can you find some feature in the Maria
that would suggest how they formed?
3) Can you observe any kind of difference between the craters in the Maria
and craters in the highlands? Describe any difference you see.
4) Try to come up with a
relative age dating for the surface of the Moon. Which features can you say
with confidence are older than other features. Make a list and a sketch and
explain how you know this to be the case.
5) Find somewhere on the Lunar surface four craters that you can use
relative age dating to unambiguously say, crater 1 is older than
crater 2 which is older than crater 3 which is older than crater 4.
Draw these craters, defend your statement also describe where on the lunar
surface these craters are located.
Definitions
Simple Crater – A crater that is
bowl shaped with sharp edges and no other distinguishing features
Central Peak -- A hill which forms in the center of a crater as a
result of “splash-back” after the meteorite impacted the surface
Rim Slumping – The edges of the crater appear fractured and have
fallen into the crater
Complex Crater – A crater that exhibits features such as a central
peak, raised rim, or rim slumping

E) Find, describe and
classify the following craters. Note anything that you find strange or
suggestive about these craters.
Albategnius (located near the center of the figure and down just a
bit.)
Herschel (small and to the left of Albategnius)
Small crater inside Ptolemaeus
Archimedes (located in Mare Imbrium)
Cassini (located in Mare Inbrium)
Two craters inside Cassini
From what you have observed come up with a general conjecture about which
craters tend to be simple and which tend to be complex. Try to come up also
with a physical motivation for your conjecture. In other words, why?
F) Measurements of crater
size.
Use the scaled eyepiece on the 10” Meade telescope to measure the diameter
of at least five craters. You can draw from the list above or pick other
craters. The one constraint is that the craters should be fairly big so that
you can test your answer against the true value found at
http://www.lunarrepublic.com/atlas/index.shtml
You should also be sure to know where your crater is so that you can find it
on this web site.
In order to actually measure the size of the crater we will need to make a
measurement of the angular field of view so we can turn millimeters into an
angle. We will use the separation of two known stars to accomplish this.
In your write up be sure to calculate the size and then compare to the
actual size. You should include a graph that shows your measured size as a
function of the actual size. You should also make comments about what the
plot indicates.