If you were to spend the night on the Moon (you might as well because it's a long trip home to Earth), you'd have to have a warm sleeping bag, because temperatures reach a low of -173 degrees Celsius! An average winter on Earth might bring temperatures of 5 degrees Celsius so -173 degrees is really cold!
Submitted by Sean (age 8, Wisconsin, USA)
(August 6,1997)
If you were to spend the night on the Moon (you might as well because it's a long trip home to Earth), you'd have to have a warm sleeping bag, because temperatures reach a low of -173 degrees Celsius.
Since the Moon and the Earth are approximately the same distance from the Sun, they receive sunlight of the same strength. So the temperature of the Earth and the Moon should be the same. It is the Moon's lack of atmosphere that creates such extreme temperatures. The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to absorb sunlight like the Earth does, and so the surface gets very hot. The Moon's lack of atmosphere also lets heat escape during lunar nights so that it gets rather chilly on the surface!
Submitted by Sean (age 8, Wisconsin, USA)
(August 6,1997)
Since the Moon and the Earth are approximately the same distance from the Sun, they should be the same temperature. It is the Moon's lack of atmosphere that creates such extreme temperatures. The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to absorb high energy solar radiation like the Earth does, and so the surface is heated by this radiation. The Moon's lack of atmosphere also lets heat escape during lunar nights so that it gets rather chilly on the surface!
Submitted by Sean (age 8, Wisconsin, USA)
(August 6,1997)
Last modified prior to September, 2000 by the Windows Team
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