"Nature is God's Will and is its expression in and through the contingent world" - Baha'u'llah, the Prophet-Founder of the Baha’i Faith

December 5, 2017

Our Moon is Born

The birth of the planets 4.5 billion years ago was extremely violent. They grew to full size by absorbing rival planet embryos in a series of titanic collisions – one of which probably gave Earth its moon. The moon’s large size, low density, and other features suggest that it emerged from an explosion of debris after a Mars-size protoplanet struck earth, vaporizing itself and part of Earth’s rocky mantle. According to one recent hypothesis, the moon had a little sister first. 
A-Birth
Rocky debris blasted into orbit coalesces into a moon – or maybe two – in less than a century. Most of the incoming protoplanet’s iron sank into Earth’s core, so the moon mass is less dense than Earth.

B-Moving out
Lunar gravity raises a tidal bulge on Earth; its spinning in turn accelerates the moon, causing it to spiral slowly outward. A sister moon, about a third as wide, orbits at a distance.

C-Splat
Within tens of millions of years the moon reels in its sister. Splatting onto the moon’s far side, it creates highlands there – a striking contrast to the low plains, called maria, on the side we see.
(National Geographic, July 2013)