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Moon
MOON
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The Moon (Latin: Luna) is Earth's
only natural satellite and the fifth largest
natural satellite in the Solar System.
The average centre-to-centre
distance from the Earth to the Moon is 384,403 km,
about thirty times the diameter of the Earth. The
Moon's diameter is 3,474 km, a little more than a
quarter that of the Earth. This means that the
Moon's volume is about 2 percent that of Earth and
the pull of gravity at its surface about 17
percent that of the Earth. The Moon makes a
complete orbit around the Earth every 27.3 days
(the orbital period), and the periodic variations
in the geometry of the Earth–Moon–Sun system are
responsible for the lunar phases that repeat every
29.5 days (the synodic period).
The Moon is the only celestial
body to which humans have travelled and upon which
humans have landed. The first artificial object to
escape Earth's gravity and pass near the Moon was
the Soviet Union's Luna 1, the first artificial
object to impact the lunar surface was Luna 2, and
the first photographs of the normally occluded far
side of the Moon were made by Luna 3, all in 1959.
The first spacecraft to perform a successful lunar
soft landing was Luna 9, and the first unmanned
vehicle to orbit the Moon was Luna 10, both in
1966. The United States (U.S.) Apollo program
achieved the only manned missions to date,
resulting in six landings between 1969 and 1972.
Human exploration of the Moon ceased with the
conclusion of the Apollo program, although several
countries have either sent or announced plans to
send people and/or robotic spacecraft to the Moon.
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia)
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Information
 | Instrument: Vixen VC200L with Flip Mirror / SLR direct
adapter |
 | Mount: Vixen SXD |
 | Exposure: 1 x 1/3000 Second |
 | Camera: Pentax *ist |
 | Sensitivity: ISO 1600 |
 | Date: November 7, 2007 |
 | Exposure start: 8:15PM |
 | Location: Cranbourne |
 | Autoguider: None |
 | Enhancement: None
Notes: First Image I took that I was happy with! |
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Public Viewing
Nights |
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Just to let
everyone know, public viewing nights are held
every first Friday of the month. Clear or cloudy
nights the public viewing night goes ahead.
Members man a number of telescopes of various
sizes and types, and for those nights where the
sky is cloudy, extended astronomical presentations
are presented in the MPAS Viewing Centre.
So please come
along and enjoy our nights sky.
How to
get Here
(Click Here)

In 2011 MPAS
will host VASTROC.
For more information, click
here...
Where are
visitors seeking from..
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