It’s time to goal for the moon – and hearth at will. In this episode of Dead Planets Society, our hosts Leah Crane and Chelsea Whyte try to crack the complete factor in half. A literal moonshot, if you’ll.
While the moon could be beautiful hanging in the evening sky, it’s the nemesis of many astronomers as a result of its gentle usually outshines the dimmer objects they’re making an attempt to watch. Destroying the moon totally isn’t an possibility for fixing this drawback – or is it? Leah and Chelsea are teaming up with consultants Haym Benaroya at Rutgers University in New Jersey and Jonathan McDowell at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts to behave on a long-standing lunar grudge and discover out.
It would take an terrible lot of power, not simply to crack the moon open and switch the ensuing particles into what McDowell describes as “the world’s biggest ball pit,” but to maintain gravity from combining all of it again collectively immediately. A cosmic jackhammer, or perhaps an enormous array of lasers, may serve to perforate the moon, but it would take one thing greater to truly crack it – maybe harnessing the energy of moonquakes, or smashing one in every of the photo voltaic system’s smaller worlds into it.
The penalties of cracking the moon open would be pretty harmful general. It may create a fiery rain of lunar fragments with the potential to finish life on Earth, and the moon’s affect on the tides would change drastically. But it’s not all dangerous – the launch of the moon’s molten centre may create the largest, weirdest piece of sculpture ever.
Dead Planets Society is a podcast that takes outlandish concepts about the right way to tinker with the cosmos – from placing out the solar to inflicting a gravitational wave apocalypse – and topics them to the legal guidelines of physics to see how they fare.
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