Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I'm Fraser Cain, the publisher of Universe Today.

  • Have you ever noticed that the Moon always looks the same?

  • Sure, the phase changes, but the actual features on the Moon always look the same from month

  • to month.

  • Does the Moon rotate? What's going on?

  • From our perspective here on Earth, the Moon always shows us the same face because it's

  • tidally locked to our planet.

  • At some point in the distant past, the Moon did rotate from our perspective, but the Earth's

  • gravity kept pulling unevenly at the Moon, slowing its rotation.

  • Eventually the Moon locked into place, always displaying the same side to us.

  • But if you looked down on the Earth-Moon system from the north celestial pole, from the perspective

  • of Polaris, the North Star, you'd see that the Moon actually does rotate on its axis.

  • In fact, as the Moon travels around the Earth in a counter-clockwise orbit every 27.5 days,

  • it also completes one full rotation on its axis - also moving in a counter-clockwise

  • direction.

  • If you look at a time lapse animation of the Moon moving entirely through its phases over

  • the course of a month, you'll notice a strange wobble, as if the Moon is rocking back and

  • forth on its axis a bit.

  • This is known as libration.

  • On average, the Moon is tidally locked to the Earth's surface. But its actual orbit

  • is elliptical, it moves closer and then more distant from the Earth.

  • When the Moon is at its closest point, it's rotation is slower than its orbital speed,

  • so we see an additional 8 degrees on its eastern side. And then when the Moon is at the most

  • distant point, the rotation is faster than its orbital speed, so we can see 8 degrees

  • on the Western side.

  • Libration allowed astronomers to map out more of the Moon's surface than we could if the

  • Moon followed a circular orbit.

  • Until the space age half the Moon was hidden from us, always facing away.

  • This hemisphere of the Moon was finally first observed by the Soviet Luna 3 probe in 1959,

  • followed by the first human eyes with Apollo 8 in 1968.

  • The two hemispheres of the Moon are very different.

  • While the near side is covered with large basaltic plains called maria, the far side

  • is almost completely covered in craters.

  • The reasons for this difference is still a mystery to planetary scientists.

  • So yes, the Moon does rotate.

  • But its rotation exactly matches its orbit around the Earth, which is why it looks like

  • it never does.

  • Thanks

  • for watching.

I'm Fraser Cain, the publisher of Universe Today.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it