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Keeping Time with the Skies Class 8 NCERT Free Notes and Mind Map (Free PDF Download)

time

Humans have always looked up at the sky to understand the passage of time. The movement of the Moon, Sun, and stars helps us track time through days, months, and years. This chapter studies how celestial bodies relate to timekeeping and calendars that we use today.

How Does the Moon’s Appearance Change and Why?

The Moon appears to change shape every night, but it’s actually the same round Moon we see differently based on how sunlight hits it and our viewing angle from Earth.

Understanding Moon Phases
The Moon doesn’t produce its own light – it reflects sunlight. As the Moon orbits around Earth, we see different portions of its sunlit side, creating what we call phases. These phases happen in a predictable cycle that takes about 29.5 days to complete.

Waxing and Waning Periods

The changing shapes we see are called lunar phases. During waxing, the Moon appears as crescent, then gibbous, then full. During waning, it goes from full to gibbous to crescent to new Moon again.

Phases of the Moon

The Moon goes through eight main phases during its monthly cycle:

PhaseAppearanceWhen Visible
New MoonNot visibleDay time only
Waxing CrescentThin crescentAfter sunset
First QuarterHalf circleEvening hours
Waxing GibbousMore than halfMost of night
Full MoonComplete circleAll night
Waning GibbousMore than halfLate evening
Last QuarterHalf circleMorning hours
Waning CrescentThin crescentBefore sunrise

Locating the Moon

The Moon’s position in the sky changes every day because it’s constantly moving in its orbit around Earth. This movement affects when and where we can spot the Moon.

Daily Movement Pattern

Understanding the Moon’s phase helps predict where to look for it in the sky and what time it will be visible.

Making Sense of Our Observations

The Moon’s changing appearance happens because only one half of the Moon faces the Sun at any time, making that half bright. The other half remains dark. As the Moon orbits Earth, we see different amounts of the bright half.

When the Moon is between Earth and Sun (new Moon), we see the dark side. When Earth is between Moon and Sun (full Moon), we see the entire bright side. All other phases show partial views of the illuminated half.

How Did Calendars Come into Existence?

Natural cycles in the sky inspired humans to create ways of measuring time. The three main cycles are day, month, and year, each based on different astronomical movements.

Basic Time Units

Day

Month

Year

Types of Calendar Systems

Lunar Calendars
Lunar calendars follow the Moon’s phases to track months. These calendars have some specific characteristics:

Solar Calendars
Solar calendars track Earth’s position relative to the Sun and seasons:

Leap Year System
Solar calendars use leap years to account for the extra quarter day in Earth’s orbit:

Luni-Solar Calendars
These calendars combine features of both lunar and solar systems:

Our Scientific Heritage

Ancient Indian astronomers made remarkable discoveries about celestial movements long before modern instruments existed.

Traditional Observations

Ancient Techniques

Historical Records
Ancient texts like Taittiriya Samhita and Surya Siddhanta contain detailed astronomical knowledge:

Modern Connections

These ancient observations form the foundation of modern astronomy. Traditional knowledge about celestial cycles continues to influence:

The Indian National Calendar

India uses a national calendar alongside the Gregorian calendar for official purposes. This solar calendar has specific features:

Structure

Calendar Reform
In 1952, the Calendar Reform Committee recommended this unified system:

Many Indian festivals are directly connected to astronomical events, particularly Moon phases and solar positions.

Lunar-Based Festivals

Festival Examples

Date Variations
These festivals occur on different Gregorian dates each year because:

Solar-Based Festivals

Some festivals follow solar calendar patterns:

Cultural Impact

Astronomical timing of festivals serves multiple purposes:

Why Do We Launch Artificial Satellites in Space?

Besides the Moon (Earth’s natural satellite), humans have launched thousands of artificial satellites that orbit our planet and serve many imp purposes.

Satellite Functions

Communication

Weather Monitoring

Scientific Research

Navigation and Mapping

Indian Space Missions

India’s space program (ISRO) has launched many successful satellites:

Earth Observation

Scientific Missions

Student Satellites

Observing Satellites

Artificial satellites can be spotted in the night sky as moving points of light:

Space Debris Challenge

The growing number of satellites creates challenges:

Questions and Answers

Have you ever seen the Moon during the day? Why do you think it is sometimes visible when the Sun is up?

Imagine you lived on the Moon instead of Earth. What would you mean by a day, a month or a year?

What would happen if Earth had two moons instead of one? How would that change the night sky?

If we didn’t have clocks or calendars, how else could we measure time?

State whether the following statements are True or False

We can only see that part of the Moon which reflects sunlight towards us

The shadow of Earth blocks sunlight from reaching the Moon causing phases

Calendars are based on various astronomical cycles which repeat in a predictable manner

The Moon can only be seen at night

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