Following the Sun: Crash Course Kids #8.2 - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Following the Sun: Crash Course Kids #8.2 - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Following the Sun: Crash Course Kids #8.2 - By Crash Course Kids



Transcript
00:09 have you ever noticed maybe on a nice summer evening
00:12 and you're running around outside that your shadow looks super
00:15 long . But then at other times of the day
00:17 it's really short . What's up with that ? Does
00:19 your shadow have a mind of its own like peter
00:22 pants , nope . I mean I hope not .
00:24 That would be strange to understand how shadows move over
00:27 time . Let's talk about what a shadow is exactly
00:30 . Mhm . Say you're standing outside in the sun
00:36 and you spot your body shadow , your body is
00:38 solid . That means it can block sunlight since sunlight
00:41 can't pass through your body , it makes a dark
00:43 area behind it opposite from the direction the sun is
00:46 coming from . This dark part where the sunlight can't
00:48 reach is your shadow . So why doesn't this dark
00:50 patch stay in the same spot throughout the day ?
00:52 Well for one thing you move so your shadow moves
00:55 with you , but let's pretend you stand in the
00:57 same spot all day long . No , wait ,
01:00 that sounds super boring . Just picture something that doesn't
01:03 move around like a tree or a building . Its
01:05 shadow would still move throughout the day . That's because
01:08 the shadow is made by the light of the sun
01:10 and the sun is constantly moving in the sky .
01:14 Well , you know , it's not really the son
01:16 that's moving . You should definitely check out our video
01:18 about how the earth moves or rotates on its axis
01:21 , making the sun appear to move across the sky
01:24 , even though it constantly seems to be changing where
01:26 it is in the sky . Some people know exactly
01:29 where the sun is going to be at certain points
01:31 during the day . In fact , ancient civilizations ,
01:34 thousands of years ago , use the sun like a
01:36 giant clock . They could tell what time it was
01:38 based on the sun's position in the sky , how
01:40 they figure that out because the sun follows a certain
01:43 pattern every day . These civilizations saw the sun rising
01:46 in the east and setting in the west . Day
01:48 after day . Soon they were able to guess what
01:50 time it was based on where the sun was on
01:52 its path from east to west . Cool . Huh
01:55 . And since the movement of the sun follows patterns
01:57 during the day , so does the movement of shadows
02:00 . Any idea what those shadow patterns might look like
02:02 ? Let's find out . We'll follow the sun for
02:08 a day and see how it changes the shadow of
02:10 a specific object . Then we can chart the length
02:13 and the direction of the shadow from morning to evening
02:15 to see which patterns we can spot first . Let's
02:18 pick an object that stands still . Not running around
02:20 all crazy like how about a lamppost ? Say one
02:23 that's about four m tall . Now , let's start
02:25 early in the morning . seven a.m. Son . Show
02:28 us what you got . The lamppost has a pretty
02:30 long shadow this early in the morning and it looks
02:32 like it's extending to the west . What happens to
02:35 the shadow if we fast forward to nine a.m. Interesting
02:38 . The shadows still pretty long , but not quite
02:40 as long as at seven a.m. And it's still stretching
02:43 out towards the west . So let's see what happens
02:45 at 11 a.m. Well , look at that , the
02:47 shadows even shorter , but again still pointing westward .
02:50 So in the morning it looks like the lamppost shadow
02:53 starts out long and get shorter as we get closer
02:56 to noon , but they all extend to the west
02:58 . What happens at noon ? Hardly any shadow .
03:01 The sun is high in the sky at noon ,
03:03 almost directly overhead . Depending on where on earth an
03:05 object is . Its shadow will usually point north or
03:08 south at noon rather than east or west . Let's
03:11 see what happens to the shadow in the afternoon ,
03:13 jumping to two PM , looks like the shadows are
03:15 getting a little bit longer again , now that the
03:17 sun's going lower in the sky , but unlike in
03:20 the morning , the shadow is now pointing east .
03:22 Will the shadow continued to get longer ? At four
03:24 PM , yep , it's definitely getting longer . Still
03:27 pointing east to how about six p.m. The shadows about
03:30 as long as it was in the morning . Right
03:32 . But again , unlike in the morning , the
03:34 shadow is stretching out towards the east . So what
03:37 patterns did we see the lamppost shadow follow ? Let's
03:39 look at these two bar graphs that recorded our observations
03:42 in the first graph , we've charted the length of
03:44 the lamppost shadows based on what we observed with the
03:47 lamppost . The sun created long shadows in the morning
03:50 when it was rising in the east when it was
03:52 almost directly overhead . At noon the shadows were shorter
03:55 . Then as the sun set in the west in
03:57 the afternoon , the shadows got longer again . And
03:59 what did we observe about the direction the shadows were
04:02 going in at certain points of the day ? Well
04:04 , like the second graph shows us . We saw
04:06 that the shadows in the morning and afternoon faced two
04:08 different directions in the mid day . Shadow was somewhere
04:11 in between . So graph number one shows us that
04:13 when the sun is low in the sky , shadows
04:15 are long . When it's high in the sky ,
04:17 shadows are short . Graph number two shows us that
04:20 whatever direction the sun is in the sky , the
04:22 shadows it creates will point in the opposite direction .
04:29 So now you know what a shadow is and that
04:31 it changes in both length and direction during the day
04:34 , depending on where the sun is in the sky
04:36 . Basically , the sun is your shadows , boss
04:38 ? Yes , son , no , son , whatever
04:40 you say , son .
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Following the Sun: Crash Course Kids #8.2 is a free educational video by Crash Course Kids.

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