Moons like Earth's could be more common than we thought
By Jason Palmer for BBC News
5 June 2011
About one in 10 rocky planets around stars like our Sun may
host a moon proportionally as large as Earth's, researchers say. Using computer
simulations of planet formation, researchers have now shown that the grand
impacts that resulted in our Moon may in fact be common. The result may also
help identify other planets that are hospitable to life. A report outlining the
results will be published in Icarus.
Last year, researchers from the University
of Zurich 's Institute
of Theoretical Physics in Switzerland and Ryuja Morishima of the
Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University
of Colorado in the US undertook a
series of simulations to look at the way planets form from gas and smaller
chunks of rock called planetesimals. Our own moon is widely thought to have
formed early in the Earth's history when a Mars-sized planet slammed into the
Earth, resulting in a disc of molten material encircling the Earth which in time coalesced into
the Moon as we know it. The team used the results from their initial study as the
input to a further "N-body simulation" to find out the likelihood
that large-scale impact events could form large satellites in the same way. Their
results showed that there is about a one in 12 chance of generating a system
comprising a planet more than half the Earth's mass and a moon with more than
half that of our Moon (taking into account the errors in the simulation, the
full range of probabilities was between one in 45 and one in four). Sebastian
Elser of the University
of Zurich said the new
estimates for the likelihood of Moon-sized satellites could inform the hunt for
extrasolar planets. Such large moons can confuse the measurements that spot the
planets, and knowing that large satellites may be common could make the
measurements easier.
The cataclysmic impact that resulted in the Moon still
presents a number of computational mysteries Also, our Moon has served to
stabilise the tilt of the Earth's axis - or its obliquity - which could
otherwise have varied drastically over relatively short time scales. That in
turn would wreak drastic changes to the way heat from the Sun is distributed
around the planet. It thus can be said that the Moon's presence made a more
stable environment in which life could evolve, Mr Elser said. "Checking
for the possibility of an obliquity-stabilising moon is a good thing if you're
trying to find out how many habitable worlds are out there in the galaxy,"
he told BBC News. "But it's surely not the only one and not the most
important." Eiichiro Kokubo is a planet formation expert who has published
widely on the mechanics behind the development of both the planets in our Solar
System and the Moon. He called the result an "interesting estimate"
but cautioned that there are several as-yet unknown parameters "which
greatly affect lunar formation and evolution and thus the probability of
hosting a large moon". He told BBC News that, for example, it is still impossible
to put numbers to the effects of a planet's initial spin before impact, or how
the disc of material is formed and evolves after it. "I think we should
take the paper as a trial calculation based on what we know about formation of
terrestrial planets and moons today,"
[An interesting estimate indeed....]
4 comments:
Another effect of such a large moon is that it serves as a shield...its gravitational influence may draw asteroids towards its surface instead of ours, much like the great gas giants attract so many flying rocks.
Indeed. Hence why it's so cratered. I've also heard that it's tidal influence might explain why sea creature started to inhabit the land - by basically getting trapped above the high water mark. I think I read that in an Asimov book though I can't remember which one.
Yep! I read that just a few weeks ago in "The Tragedy of the Moon!"
Oh, I stumbled upon this just moments ago while trying to find out what Hornblower was up to during the Siege of Copenhagen. It's a timeline which places various naval novels by diverse authors during the 1800s:
http://historicnavalfiction.com/index.php/books-timeline/1800-1809
What an excellent find! Thanks!!!
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