EmilyHopkins
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What would happen to the Earth's momentum theoretically speaking if the moon was destroyed by some outside body such as a asteroid ?
The discussion revolves around the theoretical implications of destroying the Moon, including the effects on Earth's momentum, gravitational binding energy, and orbital dynamics. Participants explore various scenarios, including the use of nuclear weapons and the consequences of removing the Moon from the Earth-Moon system. The conversation touches on concepts from physics, such as conservation of momentum, tidal forces, and the center of mass.
Participants express various viewpoints and hypotheses regarding the effects of destroying the Moon, with no consensus reached on the implications for Earth's momentum or orbital dynamics. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing views presented.
Limitations include assumptions about the methods of destruction, the dependence on specific calculations regarding momentum and mass transfer, and the unresolved nature of the effects on Earth's precession and obliquity cycles.
Simon Bridge said:depends on the details ... basically the asteroids momentum would get added to the system.
Not in a significant amount for reasonable masses in spaceflight.Would landing on the Moon and leaving the lander behind (Mass) have an affect on this ?
According to wikipedia, the total mass of all man-made objects on the moon is about 180 tons.Martinaston said:@mfb
Describe "not a significant amount" after 43 years + however much more junk is up there from all the other probes/landers, please.