Well friends, and hopefully random internet person, here is the first entry in my Blinded by Science blog (name shamelessly based on the song “She Blinded Me with Science” by Thomas Dolby which I am actually listening to while I write this). Welcome!
Now,
before I get to the main part of the entry, I thought I would begin with a
quick explanation of the purpose of this blog.
I am writing this to improve my ability to communicate science and
hopefully to answer science-related questions while I am at it. That’s where you, the reader, come in. If you have a science question, send it my
way and if I like the question, I will try to answer it as best as I can. Keep in mind that my wheelhouse is biology,
and while I would eventually like to either have guest bloggers or interview
people to answer those questions that I am not able to, for now I may just skip
the question entirely. This way, if/when
I get questions like this: “What is the Schwarzchild radius, and why does it
depend on the spin and charge of a black hole? – Jeff M”, I won’t have to just
link the Wikipedia article.
In
this case the shiny is a cool picture of the Eagle Nebula taken by the Hubble Telescope.
Actually,
in a bit of a roundabout way, that brings me to the question for today’s entry,
submitted by my three year old godson G.
G asks, “Why isn’t the moon always a circle?” And to add just a little “Dawww” to the blog,
when asked what he thought was the reason, G said, “Because it’s in the
clouds.” Now allow me a slight moment of
godfatherly pride because his answer is actually pretty plausible, all things
considered.
Well
G, to answer your question, the moon doesn’t actually change shape; as the moon
circles the Earth, the part of the moon that is lit by the sun and visible from
the Earth changes. That is why it looks
like the moon is changing shape.
You will see that only half of the ball is lit up while the other half is dark (1). When the moon looks like this, it is called a first quarter moon. Next, have your mom move the flashlight* so it is between you and the ball. You will notice that the entire part of the ball that you see is lit up (2) and when the moon looks like this, we call it a full moon.
Now have your mom move the flashlight to the left side of the ball (3). When the moon looks like this, we call it a third quarter moon. Finally, have your mom move the flashlight so it is behind the ball. The part of the ball that is facing you is now all dark (4). When the moon looks like this, we call it a new moon.
This
is why the moon looks like it is changing shapes.
Excellent explanation for a 3 year old for the phases of the moon.
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