Libration
In lunar astronomy, libration is the cyclic variation in the apparent position of the Moon that is perceived by observers on the Earth and caused by changes between the orbital and rotational planes of the moon. It causes an observer to see slightly different hemispheres of the surface at different times. It is similar in both cause and effect to the changes in the Moon's apparent size because of changes in distance. It is caused by three mechanisms detailed below, two of which cause a relatively tiny physical libration via tidal forces exerted by the Earth. Such true librations are known as well for other moons with locked rotation.
The quite different phenomenon of a trojan asteroid's movement has been called Trojan libration, and Trojan libration point means Lagrangian point.
Lunar libration
The Moon keeps one hemisphere of itself facing the Earth because of tidal locking. Therefore, the first view of the far side of the Moon was not possible until the Soviet probe Luna 3 reached the Moon on October 7, 1959, and further lunar exploration by the United States and the Soviet Union. This simple picture is only approximately true since over time, slightly more than half of the Moon's surface is seen from Earth because of libration.Lunar libration arises from three changes in perspective because of the non-circular and inclined orbit, the finite size of the Earth, and the orientation of the Moon in space. The first of these is called optical libration, the second parallax, and the third physical libration. Each of these can be divided into two contributions.
The following are the three types of lunar libration:
- Optical libration, the combined libration of longitudinal and latitudinal libration produces a movement of the sub-Earth point and a wobbling view between the temporarily visible parts of the Moon, during a lunar orbit. This is not to be confused with the change of the Moon's apparent size because of the changing distance between the Moon and the Earth during the Moon's elliptic orbit, or with the change of positional angle because of the change in the position of the Moon's tilted axis, or with the observed swinging motion of the Moon because of the relative position of the Earth's tilted axis during an orbit of the Moon.
- * Libration in longitude results from the eccentricity of the orbit of the Moon around the Earth; the Moon's rotation sometimes leads and sometimes lags its orbital position. The lunar libration in longitude was discovered by Johannes Hevelius in 1648. It can reach 7°54′ in amplitude. Longitudinal libration allows an observer on Earth to view at times further into the Moon's west and east respectively at different phases of the Moon's orbit.
- * Libration in latitude results from the Moon's axial tilt between its rotation axis and orbital axis around Earth. This is analogous to how Earth's seasons arise from its axial tilt between its rotation axis and orbital axis about the Sun. Galileo Galilei is sometimes credited with the discovery of the lunar libration in latitude in 1632 although Thomas Harriot or William Gilbert might have done so before. Note Cassini's laws. It can reach 6°50′ in amplitude. The 6.7° depends on the orbit inclination of 5.15° and the negative equatorial tilt of 1.54°. Latitudinal libration allows an observer on Earth to view beyond the Moon's north pole and south pole at different phases of the Moon's orbit.
- Parallax libration depends on both the longitude and latitude of the location on Earth from which the Moon is observed.
- * Diurnal libration is the small daily libration and oscillation from Earth's rotation, which carries an observer first to one side and then to the other side of the straight line joining Earth's and the Moon's centers, allowing the observer to look first around one side of the Moon and then around the other—since the observer is on Earth's surface, not at its center. It reaches less than 1° in amplitude.
- Physical libration is the oscillation of orientation in space about uniform rotation and precession. There are physical librations about all three axes. The sizes are roughly 100 seconds of arc. As seen from the Earth, this amounts to less than 1 second of arc. Forced physical librations can be predicted given the orbit and shape of the Moon. The periods of free physical librations can also be predicted, but their amplitudes and phases cannot be predicted.
Physical libration
This libration can be differentiated between forced and free libration. Forced libration is caused by the forces exerted during the Moon's orbit around the Earth and the Sun, and free libration represents oscillations that occur over longer time periods.
Forced physical libration
state the following:- The Moon rotates uniformly about its polar axis keeping one side toward the Earth.
- The Moon's equator plane is tilted with respect to the ecliptic plane and it precesses uniformly along the ecliptic plane.
- The descending node of the equator on the ecliptic matches the ascending node of the orbit plane.
The placement of three retroreflectors on the Moon by the Lunar Laser Ranging experiment and two retroreflectors by Lunokhod rovers allowed accurate measurement of the physical librations by laser ranging to the Moon.
Free physical libration
A free physical libration is similar to the solution of the reduced equation for linear differential equations. The periods of the free librations can be calculated, but their amplitudes must be measured. Lunar Laser Ranging provides the determinations. The two largest free librations were discovered by O. Calame. Modern values are:- 1.3 seconds of arc with a 1056-day period for rotation about the polar axis,
- a 74.6-year elliptical wobble of the pole of size 8.18 × 3.31 arcseconds, and
- an 81-year rotation of the pole in space that is 0.03 seconds of arc in size.