Lunar distance

The lunar distance is on average approximately 385,000 km (239,000 mi), or 1.28 light-seconds; this is roughly 30 times Earth's diameter.

It has implications for testing gravitational theories such as general relativity [2] and for refining other astronomical values, such as the mass,[3] radius,[4] and rotation of Earth.

The Moon is spiraling away from Earth at an average rate of 3.8 cm (1.5 in) per year, as detected by the Lunar Laser Ranging experiment.

Ernest William Brown provided a formula for the parallax of the Moon as viewed from opposite sides of the Earth, involving trigonometric terms.

One can also model the orbit as an ellipse that is constantly changing, and in this case one can find a formula for the semi-major axis, again involving trigonometric terms.

Jean Meeus gives the following extreme values for 1500 BC to AD 8000:[12] [15][16] The instantaneous lunar distance is constantly changing.

The actual distance between the Moon and Earth can change as quickly as 75 meters per second,[20] or more than 1,000 km (620 mi) in just 6 hours, due to its non-circular orbit.

The distance to the Moon can be measured to an accuracy of 2 mm over a 1-hour sampling period,[22] which results in an overall uncertainty of a decimeter for the semi-major axis.

[22] Although the instantaneous uncertainty is a few millimeters, the measured lunar distance can change by more than 30,000 km (19,000 mi) from the mean value throughout a typical month.

[23] Through the action of tidal forces, the angular momentum of Earth's rotation is slowly being transferred to the Moon's orbit.

[32] Theoretically, the lunar distance will continue to increase until the Earth and Moon become tidally locked, as are Pluto and Charon.

However, models predict that 50 billion years would be required to achieve this configuration,[33] which is significantly longer than the expected lifetime of the Solar System.

Laser measurements show that the average lunar distance is increasing, which implies that the Moon was closer in the past, and that Earth's days were shorter.

[26] There is geological evidence that the average lunar distance was about 52 R🜨 (332,000 km or 205,000 mi) during the Precambrian Era; 2500 million years BP.

[37] He exploited observations of a lunar eclipse combined with knowledge of Earth's radius and an understanding that the Sun is much further than the Moon.

[41] Early methods involved measuring the angle between the Moon and a chosen reference point from multiple locations, simultaneously.

Before accurate mechanical chronometers, the synchronization event was typically a lunar eclipse, occultation, or the moment when the Moon crossed the meridian (if the observers shared the same longitude).

After the radio waves echoed off the surface of the Moon, the return signal was detected and the delay time measured.

After the radio waves echoed off the surface of the Moon, the return signal was detected and the delay time measured.

Follow-on experiments lasting one month produced a semi-major axis of 384402±1.2 km (238,856 ± 0.75 mi),[48] which was the most precise measurement of the lunar distance at the time.

[21] During this event, participants were invited to record a series of five digital photographs from moonrise until culmination (the point of greatest altitude).

The method took advantage of the fact that the Moon is actually closest to an observer when it is at its highest point in the sky, compared to when it is on the horizon.

Modern cameras have achieved a resolution capable of capturing the Moon with enough precision to detect and measure this tiny variation in apparent size.

Variation of the distance between the centers of the Moon and the Earth over 700 days
Distribution of perigee and apogee between 3000 BC and AD 3000
Distance between the Earth and Moon ( mean value ) – sizes and distance to scale – with travel time at speed of light animated
Photo of Earth and Moon , taken by the OSIRIS-REx probe
Lunar distance to scale, with Medium Earth orbital (MEO) space as pink area for reference
Lunar distance when perigee is at syzygy (full moon or new moon, in blue) or at half moon (red). The horizontal lines (extending exactly half a mean anomalistic month to each side of perigee) are the respective averages over one mean anomalistic month, and are almost identical.
The Moon's distance from the Earth and Moon phases in 2014.
Moon phases: 0 (1) – new moon , 0.25 – first quarter, 0.5 – full moon , 0.75 – last quarter.
Oscilloscope display showing the radar signal. [ 44 ] The large pulse on the left is the transmitted signal, the small pulse on the right is the return signal from the Moon. The horizontal axis is time, but is calibrated in miles. It can be seen that the measured range is 238,000 mi (383,000 km), approximately the distance from the Earth to the Moon.
Lunar Laser Ranging Experiment from the Apollo 11 mission