LAB
The idea for this lab came from a sixth grade student in Tulsa,
Oklahoma. She did something similar for a science project.
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In this lab you will get a better understanding why it is colder in
the winter and warmer in the summer. This lab has two parts to
it. Part one will take about one month as you observe the moon's position
in the sky. Part two will take about a year to complete as you
observe the sun once a month at noon. You may ask what the moon
has to do with seasons, nothing. The sun, moon, and planets all
follow the same path called the ecliptic. The ecliptic is the
plane of the solar system where all the planets orbit the sun.
Think of it as a cheese pizza and the planets are 9 meat balls. Now
if you tilt one of the meat balls, the earth, 23.5 degrees, you have a
model of our solar system. Since the moon travels the same path as
the sun but in only one month, you can get the same effect as you would
with the sun but in one month.
This lab assumes you live in the mid northern latitudes. If you
live in the Southern Hemisphere, the same concept will work, but the sun
will be low in the north during winter.
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Part 1
This part of the lab will show you how the moon, sun, and planets
move along the ecliptic. The sun at the southern end of the
ecliptic during the winter and at the northern end in the summer.
Since the moon follows the same path in only one month, you can see how
the sun moves.
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Find out when the next new moon will
occur, this is the starting point.
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For the next 7 days, you will be watching
where the moon sets. You will need to find out where due west is
located. During the first 2 days, you may not see the moon. Observe
in the west the direction the moon is moving north or south.
Each day the moon will continue to move in the same direction until
it gets to the high or low part of the ecliptic.
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During the next 10 days, you will see
where the moon rises in the east. You may need to look up the
moon rise time. A link to moon rise times is at the bottom of
part one. Again, observe in the east how the moon
moves. This is what the sun does over the year.
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During the next 7 days, you will be
observing where the moon sets in the west. Steps 2 and 3 are
done in the evening. Step 4 will be done during the morning at
the beginning and around 3pm by the end. Keep observing when
the moon sets until you can't see the moon anymore.
What you want to observe is the direction the moon is moving either
north or south. At two points it will change the direction it has
been moving. These are the northern and southern points of the
ecliptic. Make a note to see if the moon looks brighter when it is
far north on the ecliptic compared to when it was low in the
south. If you are wondering why sometimes you look in the west and
other days you look in the east. I set up the lab this way so you
would not be up in the early morning hours. The best time to do
this lab is in June or December. During those months the full
moon is low in the ecliptic in June and high in December.
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Part 2
This part takes less of your time but takes a year to
complete. The best time to start this part is on one of the four
season days, June 21, Sept. 21, Dec. 21, or March 21. However,
this part of the lab can be done anytime.
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Once a month on a day you choose, go
outside and see how high the sun is in the sky.
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Be sure to go out between noon and
1pm. If you have bad weather, pick the next clear day.
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Please do not stare at the sun, you only
need to see where it is in the sky.
What I want you to observe is the temperature and how long your
shadow is. Is it longer when the sun is low in the sky during
winter. A longer shadow shows you the angle the light and energy
is coming from the sun. The more of earth's atmosphere it has to
go through, the cooler it gets. When the sun is high in the sky,
do you even have a shadow? Like the moon, the sun will move
north or south each month until it reaches the high or low points of the
ecliptic, then it will move the other direction.
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