The history of the Moon and theories
Information
Video published by melodysheep
This very high-quality video tells us the history of the Moon and explains several theories.
The theory (Giant impact hypothesis), currently the most widely accepted, would involve a massive celestial object colliding with Earth during its first millions of years of formation, which would have formed two objects in constant rotation: Earth and the Moon.
The theory (Georeactor Hypothesis) explains that during the early formation of Earth, it may have been rich in radioactive elements such as uranium. These elements would have concentrated beneath the Earth's surface thanks to the centrifugal force of its rotation. The result would have been a huge atomic explosion, projecting part of the planet into space and scattering debris into orbit, which would have aggregated over time to form the Moon.
The theory (Synestia Hypothesis) starts from the idea that planet Earth would have been struck so hard that it was pulverized into a kind of donut of liquid rock (Synestia), which, as it cooled, would have formed two rotating objects: Earth and the Moon.
Given the approaching Moon mission, we could hope to confirm or disprove some theories very soon.
The history of the Moon and theories
Information
Video published by melodysheep
This very high-quality video tells us the history of the Moon and explains several theories.
The theory (Giant impact hypothesis), currently the most widely accepted, would involve a massive celestial object colliding with Earth during its first millions of years of formation, which would have formed two objects in constant rotation: Earth and the Moon.
The theory (Georeactor Hypothesis) explains that during the early formation of Earth, it may have been rich in radioactive elements such as uranium. These elements would have concentrated beneath the Earth's surface thanks to the centrifugal force of its rotation. The result would have been a huge atomic explosion, projecting part of the planet into space and scattering debris into orbit, which would have aggregated over time to form the Moon.
The theory (Synestia Hypothesis) starts from the idea that planet Earth would have been struck so hard that it was pulverized into a kind of donut of liquid rock (Synestia), which, as it cooled, would have formed two rotating objects: Earth and the Moon.
Given the approaching Moon mission, we could hope to confirm or disprove some theories very soon.
The history of the Moon and theories
Information
Video published by melodysheep
This very high-quality video tells us the history of the Moon and explains several theories.
The theory (Giant impact hypothesis), currently the most widely accepted, would involve a massive celestial object colliding with Earth during its first millions of years of formation, which would have formed two objects in constant rotation: Earth and the Moon.
The theory (Georeactor Hypothesis) explains that during the early formation of Earth, it may have been rich in radioactive elements such as uranium. These elements would have concentrated beneath the Earth's surface thanks to the centrifugal force of its rotation. The result would have been a huge atomic explosion, projecting part of the planet into space and scattering debris into orbit, which would have aggregated over time to form the Moon.
The theory (Synestia Hypothesis) starts from the idea that planet Earth would have been struck so hard that it was pulverized into a kind of donut of liquid rock (Synestia), which, as it cooled, would have formed two rotating objects: Earth and the Moon.
Given the approaching Moon mission, we could hope to confirm or disprove some theories very soon.
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