New Evidence That the Moon Was Created In a Massive Collision 155
derekmead writes "New evidence that the giant impact hypothesis is correct: A paper published today in Nature shares findings of a chemical analysis of Moon rocks that shows fractional differences between the makeup of the Earth and Moon that most likely were caused by the collision between Earth and a Mars-sized planet around 4.5 billion years ago. Although the two are quite similar, it's been previously shown that Moon rocks lack volatile elements, which suggests they may have evaporated during the incredibly intense heat and pressure created during an impact event. But if the hypothesis that light elements actually evaporated from Moon rocks during their formation is correct, you'd expect to find evidence of elements being layered by mass — heavier elements would condense first, and so on. That process is known as isotopic fractionation — a concept central to carbon dating — and the Washington University team's results suggest they found exactly that (abstract). They compared the blend of zinc isotopes in Moon rocks and Earth samples, and found that the Moon rocks held slightly higher proportions of heavier zinc isotopes. If the Moon was indeed once part of Earth — which has been shown by extensive modeling (PDF) — the difference in the balance of zinc profiles would most likely be explained by lighter zinc isotopes evaporating away following a collision."
Old news? (Score:2)
Who DOESNT think the moon was caused by a collision, outside of a few Creationists?
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The moon was put there by the invisible pink unicorn, her pinkness be praised! Of course, there is no evidence of her having put the moon there because she is invisible.
Re:Old news? (Score:5, Informative)
You insensitive clod! The invisible pink unicorn is a demon implanted into the minds of credulous cretins by the Flying Spaghetti Monster to test our faith! Obviously the FSM, his spaghetiness be praised, was the one who created the moon by spontaneously generating a meatball and applying his large-body creation sauce to it. o one listen to parent - he is a deluded fool.
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I figured a meatball must have fallen off while His Great Noodleiness was creating the earth.
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Ramen to that, brother.
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Who DOESNT think the moon was caused by a collision, outside of a few Creationists?
Exactly. We all know it was created by the Divine Light of the Fifth Element as it neutralized the Great Evil.
Re:Old news? (Score:5, Interesting)
Who DOESNT think the moon was caused by a collision, outside of a few Creationists?
Tut. Look back at the past. I used to be a lot more into astronomy than I am now, and back in the 70s/80s, the thought that the moon was caused by a collision was not laughable, but looked at askance. One thought was that if there was a helluva collision, why wasn't the rest of the planet shattered into fragments (much like the poor chaps in the gap between Mars and Jupiter...). I took the "both formed together, dual planet" thesis as the latest there was 'til I read Bill Bryson (god help me...) in his book "A short history of nearly everything", or some such title.
..
Every theory is blindingly obvious and unquestionable, 'til someone proves it isn't. T. H. Huxley read Darwin's "Origin of Species" and thought it stupid of him (Huxley) not to have thought of it. Same here
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It's one of the great strengths of science.... that people can question doctrine, and continue to seek evidence to strengthen or weaken existing beliefs, no matter where in the lifecycle of the belief...
Provided the research is accurate and sufficiently developed to draw some sort of conclusion, it's good, no matter what the conclusion is, even if it is simply "here is a tiny bit more evidence for an accepted theory"
Yay science!
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Not as a kind of dual planet, although it will be in the future. The orbit of the moon and Earth has its center inside the Earth, making the moon a satellite. It is very slowly moving away from the Earth so at one point the pair's center of orbit will be outside the Earth, at which time it will be a dual planet.
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Wait is that right? It's true that the barycenter of the earth-moon system is inside the earth, and that the moon is moving farther away.
But does increasing the distance cause the barycenter to move outside the earth? I would intuitively think the opposite, that as the distance increases it would induce less "wobble" in the earth, moving the barycenter closer to earth's center.
But I'm no physicist, and I'm not saying you're wrong. Just wondering if someone could explain to me how distance effects the bar
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Self-replying here, but I just looked up the equations for the 2-body problem, and sure enough, you are right. The math makes it perfectly clear, where intuition falls on its face.
Velikovsky ... (Score:3, Funny)
With some careful interpretation and text analysis of Velikovsky's
works, we may yet find he predicted this.
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Meaning... if we ignore the predictions that were outright wrong, and infer predictions that weren't actually made from text that could just as easily be used to infer opposite conclusions... then we might alter the consensus that he was a complete loon?
Whatever works for ya, I guess.
When Worlds Collide (Score:2)
Just out of curiosity (Score:3, Funny)
What did the people who only worked 60 hour weeks in grad school believe?
Size of Earth? (Score:1)
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About the size of present earth + present moon, I'd imagine.
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Re:Size of Earth? (Score:5, Informative)
Considering it took a Mars-sized object to cause the collision event, and that a pretty substantial amount of mass would have been blasted away at escape velocity, I'm not sure the veracity of your math.
Of course, you might be roughly right, but probably not for the reasons I think you're implying...
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I was just trying to be funny, but now that you've made me think about it I'll add a bit to your comment.
There are two ways to look at it: as if the impact never happened, or as if there was an impact but for whatever reason it didn't break the moon free.
If there was no impact then we would still be size of earth + size of moon + whatever debris we lost during the impact
If there was an impact then it would be size of earth + size of moon + size of impactor - debris as Shatrat and Harperska suggested below.
O
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wouldn't it be earth + moon + object striking the earth at the time?
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earth + moon + object striking the earth - material ejected at escape velocities from massive explosion
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Since the total gravity would now be stronger then each individual piece, how much would actually permanently escape? Seeing he we don't have any rings, I don't think that much would escape.
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As mentioned by SecurityTheatre, it would be (earth + moon + impactor) - (sum of material accelerated to escape velocity by impact)
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Note: That's assuming there was no extra debris thrown out or outgassed that didn't end up back on the Moon or Earth in the end. Probably not too valid of an assumption.
Further, I'd suggest... (Score:3, Interesting)
I remember being a kid and thinking that South America and Africa would fit together like a puzzle, and this was long before I'd ever heard of Pangea. Since that time, it's my understanding that irrefutable evidence--basically, the matching of fault lines and mineral components--has been found to support this. Later, I remember having the idea that the Moon may have been spit out of the Earth as the result of a large collision. My hunch was specious as it was based only on the idea that its orbit is perfectly matched with its rotation speed (aka tidally locked), and I understand that it's possible for that to happen in other ways, but this seemed to me the best bet.
That last idea led to the Pangea idea. Maybe I'll read the freakin' article to see if other people feel the same way.
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Pangaea, Pangæa, or Pangea (play /pænËdÊ'iËÉ(TM)/ pan-JEE-É(TM);[1]) was a supercontinent that existed during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras, forming about 300 million years ago[2] and beginning to rift around 200 million years ago
The Moon is thought to have formed nearly 4.5 billion years ago, not long after the Earth.
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. Later, I remember having the idea that the Moon may have been spit out of the Earth as the result of a large collision.
Yes, you had the idea after you saw the movie about that idea back in the '60s: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_in_the_World [wikipedia.org]
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Well, then write down the ideas that you have now, and sell them to the movie business. The idea that you had as a kid was good enough to make into a movie, as we see.
I'll be happy to accept 0.001% of the profits . . .
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I don't think that that theory would be justifiable, given the proposed hypothesis of a 4.5-billion year old collision. Pangea is nominally 230 million years old, and there was a ton of plate tectonic movement before then.
That said, I've read the articles referenced, and I don't understand where the introduction gets the idea that this proves the asteroid theory. It looks to me like the same evaporation could occur in the event of a georeactor (which I believe *did* happen, though I also believe that it
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Do you have a link to any maps that show what you're describing? All the permian-era pangaea maps I'm finding online don't have nearly enough detail to see any of that. Or is it one of those things where you need a graduate degree or a LOT of free time to grok?
Also, I find myself wishing for the first time that Google Earth had a geologic time slider.
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http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3191771&cid=41687277 [slashdot.org]
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230?
I think your theory is a tad silly.
No living thing could withstand an explosion of the size that would eject a moon. I'm sorry, but there has been living things on earth far longer then 230 million years, regardless of what you think about radioisotope dating, nothing can account for this adequately. You mention this being the cause of the Permian extinction, but I find it somewhat hard to believe, since given current ideas about tectonics, etc, there are plenty of small craters that MUST have formed f
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The permian extinction is unique in that while in other extinction events, you lose up to 70% of the species, in the permian you lost 99% of the species. Whatever happened, it was huge.
I don't think that just the release of the Siberian traps (on the other side of the globe) would have done it. But that's all we've got... at the moment.
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The permian extinction killed only 70% of vertebrates, yet 99% of marine species. This, to me, leads researchers toward the conclusion of more varied biosphere changes, rather than a massive single shock like a global shockwave or a massive atmospheric ignition or something...
I sitll think you grossly underestimate the violence of a moon-creation event. The forces involved would have turned the ENTIRE surface of the earth into liquid rock. It's not something that 2,000 different species of amphibians cou
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There's a huge variation in the ages of moon rocks. Also, after looking at the methods of the isotopic dating, I'd say no... it would make it appear older.
And no, I don't think the Hudson was an impact site. Perfect circle, and the blowout ring of kimberlites at 850 mi. radius is an *exit* , not *entrance* wound.
But the ring involving Brazil, Ivory coast, down to Zimbabwe, and then through Permian India and Australia... that's a 60% circle, with a large horizontal scar (the African karoo, or equally a
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Also, note to self: looking at fungal growth (see Wikipedia's PT extinction description), the PT-extinction appears to be spread out in one location: the African Karoo.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/307/5710/709.full [sciencemag.org]
Pangea is cyclic, one of many supercontinents (Score:3)
Hello,
My understanding of current geological theory is that Pangea is just the most recent of a cyclic occurrence of supercontinents.
There have been multiple time periods in Earth's history when most of the land was in one supercontinent, which then split into continents, only to rejoin again. Wikipedia has the cycle at 300M to 500M years.
Here's the wikipedia article. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercontinent_cycle [wikipedia.org]
So, I think your exit would th
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What we could be looking at, effec
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My gut tells me different. :)
The supercontinent cycle is driven by the earth's own internal heat, the ringing effect of the impact would probably have damped within days or weeks. I've seen analogies made between the continents on the earth and bits of froth on boiling water: the water pushes the froth around, sometimes it coalesces into one patch, other times it breaks up.
However, the impact might have contributed a fair bit of the heat that drives the supercontinent cycles, either directly with kinetic
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All satellites will eventually become tidally locked to the body they're orbiting. The larger bodies gravity distorts the satellite so that is elongated toway whatever it is orbitting. If the satellite is rotating faster than it's revolving, this bulge has to move along the surface of the satellite, and this flexing gradually drains momentum, slowing it's rotation rate unt
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I always thought it was the other way round. The great ring of fire (Pacific ocean area) was where the chunk of Earth which was blown into space and became the Moon.
Though I found this link (depth of Earth's crust) http://earthquake.usgs.gov/research/structure/crust/index.php [usgs.gov], and do wonder whether the Earth could have
expanded due to nuclear fission.
Always wondered how the rock and mountains in Afghanistan are over 70 miles deep.
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Sorry to blow your theory away, but Pangea formed 300 million years ago, the moon was formed somewhere around 4 *billion* years before that.
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I think you'll find the parent *is* al gore, and he invented the Internet after dabbling in plate tectonics when he was younger.
Show some respect!
As a skeptic of the 'giant impact hypothesis' (Score:2)
"If the Moon was indeed once part of Earth — which has been shown by extensive modeling (PDF) — the difference in the balance of zinc profiles would most likely be explained by lighter zinc isotopes evaporating away following a collision."
As a skeptic of the 'giant impact hypothesis' of the Moon's origin:
Collisions between planetary bodies are too complex to model.
I won't believe anything based on computer models unless they simulate the interaction of every single particle in the solar system.
"Garbage in - garbage out."
They obviously just kept tweaking the model until it gave them the result that they wanted.
I have an article from a non-scientific magazine in the 1960's that says the Moon drifted gently into orbit around the Earth.
I
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Also, if we're wrong about how the moon was formed, the worst that'll happen is that someone has to rewrite a few astronomy textbooks. If we're wrong about humans making the planet hotter (which I don't believe we are), that means rich people don't need to spend a lot of money reducing the amount of greenhouse gases they dump into the atmosphere. Maybe that's why "giant impact deniers" are rather rarer than climate change deniers...
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" that means rich people don't need to spend a lot of money reducing the amount of greenhouse gases they dump into the atmosphere"
So it all comes down to a bunch of rich people trying to save some money.
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In global climate science, while I believe their theories hold some water, there are multiple conflicting models, none of which are possible to compare with existing conditions over a long term (at least not until we have more time to study it).
The models of the moon, on the other hand, are comparatively simple. The moon is one of the only planetary bodies to have very low levels of heavy metals. This is VERY hard to explain and limits its explanation. Simply modeling the interaction of planetary elements
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Moon is actually drifting away from Earth - around 5 cm/year. 50 cm/decade, 500cm/century, 50m/millenium, 50km/million years, 50,000km/billion years, 250,000km/5 billion years. But that extends beyond the age of the solar system.
At the time of the theoretical collision, the Moon was only a third of the distance from Earth than it is today.
http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110803/full/news.2011.456.html [nature.com]
Partially on the subject... (Score:2)
A sci-fi author (can't recall who) once wrote in a novel that Earth's crust contains a relatively high percentage of heavier elements because of the Moon. Without Moon's (relatively big, as far as satellites are concerned) gravitational pull, heavier elements would've fallen toward Earth's center leaving only lighter ones to cool down and turn solid on the crust.
Can somebody more knowledgeable on the field comment on the theory? Is there any truth in this? Is this an important factor on making a planet habi
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Probably wouldn't have more than a negligible effect -- after all, you don't lighten noticibly when the moon passes overhead.
The moon can barely manage a tiny slosh when tugging on an entire ocean.
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This is incorrect.
First, if the moon and Earth were both tidally locked, this might have some ever-so-tiny effect, but probably not enough to notice. There was a time when the fact that the Moon's center of mass is offset from its center of figure was thought to be due to being tidally locked with to the Earthâ"that has been shown not to be the case and the difference is thought to be due to volcanism and large impacts.
Note that the Earth-Moon's barycenter (center of mass) is located within the interi
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It's not incorrect. It's a simplification.
The Earth has what's called a tidal bulge that is caused by the moon (and the sun). This tidal bulge extends toward and away (180-degrees) from the Moon, though due to various strength and inertial effects and rotation of the Earth, the bulge doesn't actually point directly at the Moon.
What it amounts to is that the moon's gravitational effect on the Earth, averaged over the long term, would not have any significant differential effect on high-mass vs low-mass mat
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Yeah, you got it. The novel was Earthlight [wikipedia.org] by Arthur C. Clarke.
BTW, thanks guys for the insightful responses.
better headline (Score:2)
Better I think would be "New information discovered adds support to theory of moon created by massive collision"
The headline made it sound like it was already established fact. And even though it's correct use of the word, I think that calling this new discovery "evidence" contributes to this confusion. (though it is the strongest current theory, and will probably eventually be accepted as fact although not likely ever proven)
More than one model (Score:3)
There has been a flurry of new models (or significant variations on the old model) suggested recently. They include a smaller than Mars impactor that hit at a higher velocity and a slower impactor that was approximately the same size as the newly formed Earth. Both were inspired by studies that showed that the evection resonance of the Earth-Moon-Sun system would allow for a greater slow down in the rotation of the Earth getting to the contemporary 24 hr day. (see http://io9.com/5952497/further-evidence-that-the-moons-explosive-birth-was-weirder-than-we-thought [io9.com] et al)
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I still haven't given up on the scientific theory that "and YHWH set the lesser light in the sky to govern the night".
That was just before He gave men nipples and women a shriveled weenie and unsealed ball sac.
Carbon dating (Score:2)
I feel obliged to point out that isotopic fractionation is not "central" to carbon dating. The key to carbon dating is that radioactive carbon-14 decays to nitrogen-14 with a half life of roughly 5700 years, enabling biological material to be dated by its residual carbon-14 content. That is not isotopic fractionation, it's radioactive decay. Isotopic fractionation would be involved if you observed a difference in the ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-13 in plants versus that same ratio in the air.
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I think he's talking about geological-scale radioisotope dating (of rock strata, for example), and using the term "carbon dating" as a generic.
Not necessary (Score:2)
We don't have to exercise ourselves that much to know, actually - just check the headlines at the time. The Guardian puts it most succintly:
Earth hit by huge asteroid, creates moon
And from The Sun:
Rooney injured by space rock
How the hell does the moon work, anyway? (Score:2)
Yeah, and how the hell does the moon work, anyway? Where did it come from? NOBODY KNOWS! NOBODY KNOWS! We'll never know!
Re:How the hell does the moon work, anyway? (Score:5, Funny)
Easy. First of all, the Moon is made of green cheese. What most people don't know, though, is that this is a highly stinky form of cheese. So the Earth keeps its distance from the smelly Moon. The Moon landings were all faked except for that one documentary about a man and his dog who went to the moon looking for a grand day out.
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The Moon doesn't work. It's protesting in one of those "Occupy" franchises.
The Moon -- A Ridiculous Liberal Myth (Score:5, Funny)
It amazes me that so many allegedly "educated" people have fallen so quickly and so hard for a fraudulent fabrication of such laughable proportions. The very idea that a gigantic ball of rock happens to orbit our planet, showing itself in neat, four-week cycles -- with the same side facing us all the time -- is ludicrous. Furthermore, it is an insult to common sense and a damnable affront to intellectual honesty and integrity. That people actually believe it is evidence that the liberals have wrested the last vestiges of control of our public school system from decent, God-fearing Americans (as if any further evidence was needed! Daddy's Roommate? God Almighty!)
Documentaries such as Enemy of the State have accurately portrayed the elaborate, byzantine network of surveillance satellites that the liberals have sent into space to spy on law-abiding Americans. Equipped with technology developed by Handgun Control, Inc., these satellites have the ability to detect firearms from hundreds of kilometers up. That's right, neighbors .. the next time you're out in the backyard exercising your Second Amendment rights, the liberals will see it! These satellites are sensitive enough to tell the difference between a Colt .45 and a .38 Special! And when they detect you with a firearm, their computers cross-reference the address to figure out your name, and then an enormous database housed at Berkeley is updated with information about you.
Of course, this all works fine during the day, but what about at night? Even the liberals can't control the rotation of the Earth to prevent nightfall from setting in (only Joshua was able to ask for that particular favor!) That's where the "moon" comes in. Powered by nuclear reactors, the "moon" is nothing more than an enormous balloon, emitting trillions of candlepower of gun-revealing light. Piloted by key members of the liberal community, the "moon" is strategically moved across the country, pointing out those who dare to make use of their God-given rights at night!
Yes, I know this probably sounds paranoid and preposterous, but consider this. Despite what the revisionist historians tell you, there is no mention of the "moon" anywhere in literature or historical documents -- anywhere -- before 1950. That is when it was initially launched. When President Josef Kennedy, at the State of the Union address, proclaimed "We choose to go to the moon", he may as well have said "We choose to go to the weather balloon." The subsequent faking of a "moon" landing on national TV was the first step in a long history of the erosion of our constitutional rights by leftists in this country. No longer can we hide from our government when the sun goes down.
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...that's no moon...
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...that's no moon...
And it doesn't work.
Challenged, he pulls the trigger.
Fireballs race together and toward the planet.
The planet explodes.
Well I guess I showed you.
Re:How the hell does the moon work, anyway? (Score:5, Funny)
Romney: well what you have to know is that the Moon is NOT a job creator. The Moon is part of that 47% of the solar system that sponges off of the hard work the other half is doing. The Moon is a worthless satellite.
Some Character Who Is Not Romney: Yes, but isn't the Moon responsible for tides? Without tides, there would be no surfers. Without surfers, there wouldn't be the movie Point Break and that would be tragic. The Moon is also responsible for werewolves. You need a full Moon for werewolves to change And I quote
Even a man who is pure in heart
and says his prayers by night
may become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms
and the autumn moon is bright
and if he doesn't wear his Mormon magic underwear
Were it not for the Moon, then the act of baring our posteriors would simply be called "baring our posteriors" or something equally uncool.
I could site numerous other examples, Mr. Future-President-To-Be-Because-The-Current-President-Was-Coasting-Like-It-Was-The-Month-Of-June-In-His-Senior-Year-So-He-Phoned-In-The-Previous-Debate-And-Dropped-Around-4-Points-In-The-Polls-According-To-Real-Clear-Politics. But I think I have made my point. Check and Mate, sir.
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You know, I bet this observation hasn't occurred to the scientists working on this problem. If they hear it, they'll go "OMG you're right! Why didn't we think of that??"
Re:Doesn't anyone think... (Score:4, Informative)
A mars size rock hits the earth, that would create enough heat to melt the rocks and send them into space as a big liquid ball. Those crazy astronauts that play with their drinks show in microgravity that liquid will prefer to be in a sphere shape. So a chunk of liquid rock the size of the moon over Thousands/Millions of years of slowly cooling down would take the shape of a sphere.
Now the moon isn't a perfect sphere, that is because it is spinning while it was cooling and those other gravitational forces shifting it, and once an awhile getting pounded by some other rocks.
Sorry was that a troll?
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Grandparent is rated -1, but actually I've wondered about this myself. Is your explanation really accurate or are you just guessing?
Intuitively I would also suppose that a body that was formed from a collision rather than a cloud of gas would assume an irregular shape. I mean, many asteroids and moons of Jupiter are probably product of colissions and do have an irregular shape.
Re:Doesn't anyone think... (Score:5, Informative)
I suppose you're a troll as well, but to hell with it, I'll bite.
Any celestial body large enough to have a sizable gravity (I am sure there's a threshold formula somewhere, but CBA to check) will take, in time, a spherical shape because of... GRAVITY! (applause in the background)
http://www.pa.msu.edu/sciencet/ask_st/031198.html [msu.edu]
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I'm not trolling, I'm really interested about this. STOP BEING SO PARANOID!!!
And thanks for the link.
Cheers
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Sorry, it was such a basic question from my perspective, to which the answer is readily and widely available since... forever, so I thought wrongly of it.
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Oh noez, I have been CAUGHT!
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Re:Doesn't anyone think... (Score:5, Informative)
You can read about the reason for the moon's spherical shape here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrostatic_equilibrium#Planetary_geology [wikipedia.org]
It's fairly straightforward, nothing at all like Quantum mechanics.
Re:Doesn't anyone think... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen."
Albert Einstein
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It's like finding George Washington's dried blood on your baseball bat. It's possible there are other ways the blood got there, but you probably just whacked the guy.
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Going to the moon again will cost billions. Running a few isotopic scans on rocks, involves a grant of several thousand dollars.
Do you grasp the difference between a thousand dollars and a billion dollars?
Now, the war in Iraq probably cost more than ten trips to the moon, and was a far less productive use of our resources - but that's a very different argument.
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Take it easy with the detail work, man. He's probably a politician.
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Going to the moon again will cost billions.
The Russians were offering to send you around the moon for a measly $100 million in 2005, and now all these new commercial space ventures are offering the same thing for the same price.
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Fry: That's not an astronaut, it's a TV comedian! And he was just using space travel as a metaphor for beating his wife.
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Because the started as rotating balls of dust that gradually compacted into solid objects. This causes them to form into roughly spherical objects.
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But why are all the planets and moons so round? Why do we not see some that are odd shapes?
Self-gravity. With sufficient mass and radius, gravitational forces overcome the yield strength of the materials and cause even solid bodies to assume a spherical shape. This occurs at about 300km radius. The surface may still be irregular, but overburden pressure causes rocks at depth to undergo plastic or ductile deformation. For a mathematical derivation, Google "potato radius".
The Moon has a radius of over 1,700 km. Bear in mind, also, that much of it and the Earth would have be molten material aft