Study: Why the Moon's Far Side Looks So Different
StartsWithABang writes 55 years ago, the Soviet probe Luna 3 imaged the side of the Moon that faces away from us for the first time. Surprisingly, there were only two very small maria (dark regions) and large amounts of mountainous terrain, in stark contrast to the side that faces us. This remained a mystery for a very long time, even after we developed the giant impact hypothesis to explain the origin of the Moon. But a new study finally appears to solve the mystery, crediting the heat generated on the near side from a hot, young Earth with creating the differences between the two hemispheres.
This is what happens when you don't read the directions on the package...
I thought it was to make the dome put by the aliens easier to find.
Earth used to be a cute little sun.
Table-ized A.I.
The moon became tidally locked within a few million years after its formation (around 4.5 billion years ago), so it's been tidally locked for over 4 billion years.
But really, did the earth stay hot enough for "a few million years" - hot enough to affect the locked side of the moon more than the other?
The moon would have cooled somewhat faster, being smaller, but this theory requires the earth to stay hot enough to affect the "earth side" of the for a very long time after the moon has cooled enough to solidify.
"Cats like plain crisps"
But this one has exclamation points!!!!!!
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
The moon's far side take the hit from lots more objects. That's why the far side looks like it does. This article explains why the near side looks different - i.e., has more distinct maria.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
This remained a mystery for a very long time
Martians notwithstanding, nobody had any idea what the far side of the moon looked like before 1959. Sure, 55 years may be "a very long time" for some people, but we're not exactly talking about something that puzzled Hipparchus here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Discuss!
Shit story on shit site. I'm blocking medium in /etc/hosts now.
My room looks different in the dark as well.
I'd wager that the impact event which formed the Aitken basin on the far side of the moon had much more to do with it. This crater is the single largest known impact in the solar system. Much like a bullet leaves a small hole at ingress and shreds the egress, this impact could have left Aitken on one side of the moon and liquefied the other.
More medium.com unreadability. Just find some place less hung up on tablets to spam your copy/paste "articles" already.
Yes, this theory makes sense if the moon is perfectly tidally locked. However, that isn't likely. The "far side" of the moon has been that only in human history: only a few thousand years. We're talking about billions of years. All that would be needed is a few centimeters creep per year and the far side would become the near side in the course of millions of years.
This theory doesn't explain how the marias happen to all be on the near side presently given this creep. It also does not account for the likelihood that the warming would have been across the entire moon with this creep. It also does not account for the obvious fact that there are two kinds of surfaces on the near side on the moon: if this warming had been the cause, the difference would be more semi-hemispherical in nature (warming entirely one-half of the surface of the moon) -- the marias cover a lot less than that.
My bogus detector is bleeping loudly
It would be nice to read an explanation of how that really could happen. I mean, what kind of radiation can keep the moon hot at a so long distance with just empty space between both and only 2700K on the earth side
Seriously, guys, does every third sentence have to end with a bang?
Ooh, moderator points! Five more idjits go to Minus One Hell!
Delendae sunt RIAA, MPAA et Windoze
So.... At the risk of stating the obvious: modern man has been on this planet for around 50,000 years;
Australia has been colonised by "modern man" for longer than 50,000 years. Modern man left Africa more like 100,000 years ago, and if you lifted one of those babies out and plonked him in the "modern world" noone would notice the difference.
I don't know. After a short time, they'd probably figure out where that damned plague game from, since that baby would be carrying pathogens which no 'modern world' human has ever had exposure.
But, yeah, just basing it on physiological observations, they wouldn't be able to tell the difference.