conan said:
I have recently been reading that the currently favoured theory for the origin of the moon is that a Mars sized object smashed into an almost finished earth, ripped off large parts of proto-Earth's mantle and the result debris coallesced into the Earth and moon again.
I know the universe is big and 4 billion years is beyond human comprehension, but boy, that does seem like a bit of jolly good luck to me.
so does the fact that the fine-structure constant is within 2% of what it is. it's a fundamental constant that Nature seems to have taken on and we have no idea how it came to be that it has value that it does, but if it were significantly different, we would be around to be talking about it.
how about the jolly good luck we mammels benefited from when the Yucatan Asteroid came blasting down, executing judgement upon the nasty dinosaurs, allowing whatever was the proto-mammel to come forth and thrive in the absense of the nasty bully dinos that were dominating everything until then.
revolution, baby! mammels of the world unite!
Anybody else there find this collision theory just a little too convenient?
i actually found it quite believable, both as the science was presented (in some NOVA Origins program) and satisfying from my world-view of things.
a) First of all that two such large bodies were in the same vicinity of each other
not as uncommon for that epoch.
b) That the they clipped each other and didnt bang into each other like marbles
from what i saw on NOVA, the depictation was more like the head-on collision (where the big asteroid or proto-planet got completely absorbed in the Earth, but a tremendous amount of matter, and more of it silicates, was tossed out the other side), but it certainly seems more likely that, if a collision happened, it would not be perfectly head-on.
c) That the core that banged into us stayed around and didnt bugger off somewhere else
the planet is still pretty soft. dig a whole 1000 km deep and see what you get. it was even softer way back then.
d) That the Earth's orbit was pushed towards the sun or made elongated
if it's going to tip the axis (which it would do if the collision was not head-on) that tipping will, during some season of the year, expose the axis or pole toward the sun. as for the orbit, one would expect the collision to make it more elliptical, not less. it would have to be a
very lucky collision, both in magnitude and timing, to cause an already elliptical orbit to become less elliptical (more circular).
e) That the resulting debris coallesced back around these two large bodies and didnt get smacked into other orbits.
well, it possibly
did pick up other debris, since this was so early in the life of the planet that our orbital territory hadn't yet been completely "cleared" or "mopped up" by the young Earth. after the collision, the Earth was still mostly a blob and soft (and liquid) enough that gravity would force it back to a spherical shape.
f) That the mass of the two large space bodies was right just after to the collision to form bodies that would orbit each other and then later after the coallescing, still just right to orbit each other.
that's just what you get when the initial spin or swirl has a resulting angular momentum. it's similar to what happens with the primordial swirls that become galaxies or solar systems. why is it that we just "luckily" have a sufficient momentum to orbit around the Sun or that our system has just the right momentum to orbit around the galactic center and yet the contents inside can array themselves? that "luck" appears to have been repeated a zillion times in our (or any) galaxy.
As far as I've read, the main reason for this theory being preferred over co-forming is the large angular momentum of the Earth moon system.
yup. rather than a large main planet and a much smaller satellite "moon", it is more akin to twin planets whirling around their common center of mass.
But like I said 4 billion years is a long time and who knows how many collisions we've had in this time with other solar systems, or for that matter, what the energy level was in the forming universe.
there was a whole lotta smashin' goin' on back then. this
big mondo collision might have happened toward the tail end of that epoch.
DaveC426913 said:
I see your point but I think the idea here is that the unlikeliness of the events should factor into the plausibility of the theory.
but,
if it's after the fact, then it's more like the unlikliness should factor into the wonder of the fact that we're even here to notice it. very similar to the issue of the fine-tuned universe. science should search for natural causality (of the amazingly unlikely event), but when such knowledge seems to be lacking, it seems appropriate to me to exclaim
"holy crap!".
another event that the NOVA program pointed out was the
Iron Catastrophe. as the Earth was being formed by clearing out its orbital realm by attracting globs and sticking to them (thus getting bigger and even more attractive), the composition, lotsa iron but also a bunch of other elements including silicates and what eventually formed the atmosphere, was roughly homogeneous, not (yet) stratified. but the molten silicates and stuff were less dense the liquid iron and nickel. in a single event, 99%+ of the iron decided to "go south" (down, way down) causing the lighter silicates to bubble up to eventually form the crust. but the iron core, remaining molten, spun due to the initial angular momentum it had and still is rotating down there today, creating this huge magnetic field that traps the nasty charged particles from the solar wind and flairs (the Van Allen radiation belt) and prevents that nasty solar blast from stripping our atmosphere as it had to Mars. Mars, being smaller, has a larger surface area to volume ratio and it's core may have cooled sufficiently to harden a bit, not spin (transferring the angular momentum to the rest of the planet), lose its magnetic field, then the nasty Sun spits out wind and solar flares that strip off the Martian atmosphere.
there are
lots of lucky breaks (or providential, for some that have sympathies for a notion of "intelligent design" with a small "i" and small "d", not that bullsh1t that spews from the Discovery Institute). more than you will ever know.
that's my story and I'm sticking to it.