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Thursday, 7 December 2017

Moon Information Report

The moon is only 380,000 kilometers from the earth. That's four hundred times closer than the sun. But traveling to the moon would be like taking to hundred trips to australia.

If you had a jet-propelled skateboard that could do 100 kilometers an hour you’d take six months to get there. The moon’s diameter is 3,576 kilometres.

That’s over twice the length of New Zealand. But the moon is about four times smaller than Earth, and four million times smaller than the sun. Because the moon is small, its gravity is weak. If you entered a high jump competition on the moon, you would be able to jump a lot higher than you can on earth.

Scientists think that about 4 billion years ago, another planet crashed into earth. Because there was an explosion

Earth's bits and pieces cracked open and some bits were blown into space some of these pieces came to form the moon. Many spacecraft have flown past the moon, and some have landed on it.

The scientists travelled to the moon in the 1960s and 1970s to gather rock samples and do experiments. Astronauts footprints will last millions of years because there’s nothing to blow them away.

Our moon is the second-brightest object in the sky, after the sun. It’s bright enough for us to see it in the daytime. But it doesn’t make its own light. It only reflects light from the sun.

We see only one moon in the sky. That’s because it takes exactly the same time to rotate. It takes the moon almost twenty-eight days to go around Earth.



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