Astronomy/moon orbit

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Question
Why is the moon so locked in place that we only see the one face? Does it spin at all if only a degree or so a thousand years? Are other moons locked in like ours?
Thanks and regards
Campbell

Answer
Hi,
Only yesterday one person asked me this verisame question, in a different way.

Yes ofcourse! Nothing is the universe is ever Unique, over space & time! (It is so vast that over greate areas, things are bound to repeat themselves, if not in place, then in time)!!

May be that is what made the chinese say..the more things "change", the more they remain the "same"!

here is my answer to him.

Dear ....,
(Skipped his name! could be your friend and wouldnt like name revealed..anyways..what's in a name?) :)

That is due to tidal "phase locking".
That is a general rule applying to even planets that orbit close to their stars. If mercury had not been in 3:2 resonance, it would have been tidally phase locked like our moon. (showing same face to the sun).

The moon and some other moons of other planets in the solar system are tidally phase-locked by gravitational bulges / distortions in their bodies.

There is a clear gravitationsl gradient (variation of gravitational intensity (g) from the satellite's / orbiting planet's opposing point and closest point to the main gravitating body. This distorts the satellite to make it non-spherical and pear shaped!

As the satellite rotates, newer and newer areas have to undergo this deformation, at the expense of the angular momentum of the satellite's / planet's spin.

[Energy of deformation comes at the expense of angular momentum].

In the end the satellite thus slows down and stops.
[Some energy is lost in non-regenerative lossy heat processes, that keep their cores molten, as in the case of some icy satellites of our gas giants].

The closest example on earth is running a car on tyres with less air pressure. You will notice, since the tyres are flatter, lot of energy is wasted in deforming the rim of the tyre that "comes under the car on the road". As each spin means that deformation has to travel along the whole periphery of the tyre, a lot of energy is wasted, and engine is loaded.
[we can directly experience deformational loading in bicycles with less tyre pressure].

In some cases, the satellite may "speedup" to get phase locked too.

The other benefit of tidal locking is that is that to conserve overall system angular momentum, the satellite picks up orbital speed and hence actually "recedes" from its parent, as our moon is doing now at approx 4 cm / year!!

reference:-
1 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_(planet)
2 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tidal_locking

hope that suffices.

Please do rate the answer.

Jayen

Astronomy

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Jayendra Upadhye

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1 - General questions on most astronomy topics such as:- Solar system, Cosmology, Black holes, Quasars, Dark matter etc. 2 - General questions about the geologies of planets. 3 - General questions about Orbits and laws governing them. 4 - General questions about rockets / spaceships 5 - General questions about stellar interiors and supernovas.

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I was an askme.com expert rated no#1 for quite some time - and was top ten there by the time it closed - in Astronomy and general science categories.

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Bachelor of Engg. (Electrical engg), Maharaja Sayajirao university of Baroda, Gujarat, India.

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