What's new

An Interesting Observation About The Moon

Scott Whaley

Been spending a lot of time on here!
Joined
Aug 4, 2018
Messages
1,365
Reaction score
1,421
Can others edit my Photos
Photos NOT OK to edit
Ive been looking back at some of my older shots and just realized we see more of the moon than I thought. We have been taught we only see one side of the moon. Well, that's true and no so true. Here are some moon shots I have taken at different times of the year. Notice how the large crater is in different places.

IMG_20231001_201815_381.webp
The End Of The Super Moon Early This Morning.webp
Pink Moon 1.webp
Moon Shot VGA.webp
Super Moon 11-14-2016.webp
Sturgeon Suppermoon 08-13-2022-5480.webp
 
"The large crater" - which of the hundreds of large craters do you mean?

I don't see much difference in what these shots cover, but I think it's well known that we see a bit more than half of the moon from earth.
 
Given time, one can see a total of 59% of the moons surface. This is caused by diurnal, longitude and latitude and libration.
 
Which one of these Samsung uses? /joke. :chuncky:
 
"The large crater" - which of the hundreds of large craters do you mean?

I don't see much difference in what these shots cover, but I think it's well known that we see a bit more than half of the moon from earth.
Tycho crater i believe...
 
Maybe it's me, but the orientation in #1 and #2 seems different from the rest, maybe 90 degrees. I'm comparing the "notch" in the line of three dark areas.

#1 - "Notch" at bottom of shot. #2 is the same angle.
IMG_20231001_201815_381.webp


#5 - "Notch" at right of shot. Some slight differences but the others are closer to this.
Super Moon 11-14-2016.webp



That spot looks like Pacman!
 
From our point of view it appears to by rotating clock wise over time.

Which is scientifically described in a comment by 480sparky.
 
Maybe it's me, but the orientation in #1 and #2 seems different from the rest, maybe 90 degrees. I'm comparing the "notch" in the line of three dark areas.

#1 - "Notch" at bottom of shot. #2 is the same angle.
View attachment 279163

#5 - "Notch" at right of shot. Some slight differences but the others are closer to this.
View attachment 279164


That spot looks like Pacman!

That's called field rotation, caused by the earth rotating.
From our point of view it appears to by rotating clock wise over time.

Only because you're in the northern hemisphere. It goes CCW south of the equator.
 
Here are 2 photos of the moon I took in South Africa last January.

Africa-2024-RSW-6 (53 of 253).webp
Africa-2024-RSW-6 (54 of 253).webp
 
Maybe it's me, but the orientation in #1 and #2 seems different from the rest, maybe 90 degrees. I'm comparing the "notch" in the line of three dark areas.

#1 - "Notch" at bottom of shot. #2 is the same angle.
View attachment 279163

#5 - "Notch" at right of shot. Some slight differences but the others are closer to this.
View attachment 279164


That spot looks like Pacman!
That's simply down to camera orientation, some shot in Landscape others in Portrait
 
The reason that we mainly see the same view of the moon seems to be because it's center of gravity is off-set. In effect, the "heavy side" stays facing earth, but not quite perfectly. That is an interesting theory because how much of an offset is there? Is it possible that something could alter the balance that the rotation becomes more normal? Does anyone care? Why?
 

Most reactions

New Topics

Back
Top Bottom