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    Earth's two moons? It's not lunacy, but new theory

    WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” In a spectacle that might have beguiled poets, lovers and songwriters if only they had been around to see it, Earth once had two moons, astronomers now think. But the smaller one smashed into the other in what is being called the "big splat."

    The result: Our planet was left with a single bulked-up and ever-so-slightly lopsided moon.

    Click photo to view more images. (AP/Martin Jutzi and Erik Asphaug, University of California, Santa Cruz via Nature)Click photo to view more images. (AP/Martin Jutzi and Erik Asphaug, University of California, Santa Cruz via N …

    The astronomers came up with the scenario to explain why the moon's far side is so much more hilly than the one that is always facing Earth.

    The theory, outlined Wednesday in the journal Nature, comes complete with computer model runs showing how it might have happened and an illustration that looks like the bigger moon getting a pie in the face.

    Outside experts said the idea makes sense, but they aren't completely sold yet.

    This all supposedly happened about 4.4 billion years ago, long before there was any life on Earth to gaze up and see the strange sight of dual moons. The moons themselves were young, formed about 100 million years earlier when a giant planet smashed into Earth. They both orbited Earth and sort of rose in the sky together, the smaller one trailing a few steps behind like a little sister in tow.

    The smaller one was a planetary lightweight. The other was three times wider and 25 times heavier, its gravity so strong that the smaller one just couldn't resist, even though it was parked a good bit away.

    "They're destined to collide. There's no way out. ... This big splat is a low-velocity collision," said study co-author Erik Asphaug, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

    What Asphaug calls a slow crash is relative: It happened at more than 5,000 mph, but that's about as slow as possible when you are talking planetary smashups. It's slow enough that the rocks didn't melt.

    And because the smaller moon was more than 600 miles wide, the crash took a while to finish even at 5,000 mph. Asphaug likened the smaller moon to a rifle bullet and said, "People would be bored looking at it because it's taking 10 minutes just for the bullet to bury itself in the moon. This is an event if you were looking at, you'd need a big bag of popcorn."

    The rocks and crust from the smaller moon would have spread over and around the bigger moon without creating a crater, as a faster crash would have done.

    "The physics is really surprisingly similar to a pie in the face," Asphaug said.

    And about a day later, everything was settled and the near and far sides of the moon looked different, Asphaug said.

    Co-author Martin Jutzi of the University of Bern in Switzerland said the study was an attempt to explain the odd crust and mountainous terrain of the moon's far side. Asphaug noticed it looked as if something had been added to the surface, so the duo started running computer simulations of cosmic crashes.

    Earth had always been an oddball in the solar system as the only planet with a single moon. While Venus and Mercury have no moons, Mars has two, while Saturn and Jupiter have more than 60 each. Even tiny Pluto, which was demoted to dwarf status, has four moons.

    The theory was the buzz this week in Woods Hole, Mass., at a conference of scientists working on NASA's next robotic mission to the moon, said H. Jay Melosh of Purdue University.

    "We can't find anything wrong with it," Melosh said. "It may or may not be right."

    Planetary scientist Alan Stern, former NASA associate administrator for science, said it is a "very clever new idea," but one that is not easily tested to learn whether it is right.

    A second moon isn't just an astronomical matter. The moon plays a big role in literature and song. And poet Todd Davis, a professor of literature at Penn State University, said this idea of two moons โ€” one essentially swallowing the other โ€” will capture the literary imagination.

    "I'll probably be dreaming about it and trying to work on a poem," he said.

     

    158 comments

    • big pig  •  6 mths ago
      if it was God was behind it.
    • radical right winger  •  6 mths ago
      google "moon' and see all the crazy stuff there is about it.
    • Brad Hayden  •  6 mths ago
      It may capture the literary imagination, but does nothing for mine. As a three year astronomy student, I'm familiar with most of the theories surrounding the moon and this new one doesn't fit. Soil samples from the moon reveal that it is made from the same material as the original earth, including those taken on the flat side. The dark areas on that side are lava, from it boiling up through cracks in the surface, after the great bombardment which cleared the solar system of most of its stray asteroids. If the flat side had been create the way they describe, it would have covered the impact craters on that side. Since they're there, I find their logic flawed.
    • Chinese Air  •  6 mths ago
      this use to be where vash stamped lives
    • Earl  •  6 mths ago
      Would it not be so cool to look up in the sky at night and see two moons?
    • dimchia  •  6 mths ago
      One doesn't need to have lived 4 billion years ago to be inspired by this idea of two moons. While Prof. Davis is still "dreaming about it and trying to work on a poem", here is a quick one by me!

      I went for walk in the night,
      And saw two moons in a fight.
      Oh big and shinny one,
      You've squashed a tinny love.
    • bobj  •  6 mths ago
      I learned that the moon acted as a "shield" taking the blunt of asteroid and comet hits, and in effect, protecting the Earth a little bit. If that is true, and if there were enough hits after it became tidally locked, then the far side of the moon might be expected to be a bit rougher and seem as if stuff were plastered to it. The side facing the Earth might have received fewer hits, relatively speaking.
    • Anthony Edwards  •  6 mths ago
      Knowledge is power.
    • Jerry  •  6 mths ago
      So when the cat was playing the fiddle, which moon did the cow jump over?
    • Bob Peterson  •  6 mths ago
      It still does when I forget my glasses
    • Half Liger Half Wholphin  •  6 mths ago
      My own moon has two cheeks.
    • Who ate your meds  •  6 mths ago
      How does this fit with the theory that--The earth was struck by something big which blasted off a chunk that created the moon--in the first place?- LOL,sorry for my terminology,you get the idea though don't you.
    • YashaR  •  6 mths ago
      I love reading these science articles and get away from all the political #$%$
    • A Yahoo! User  •  6 mths ago
      K.I.S.S. Keep it simple stupid. Like Bobj said, the moon is locked in orbit, one side facing us permanently. If the dark side of the moon is always in the way of stuff coming for Earth and/or the moon, it's going to be more messed up than the other. Any lopsided formation inside the crust could be from the initial split from planet earth during the mass collision that formed the moon in the first place.
    • RG  •  6 mths ago
      (The astronomers came up with the scenario to explain why the moon's far side is so much more hilly than the one that is always facing Earth.) Couldn't it also be true that incoming meteors would hit the far side of the moon instead of the Earth?
    • Will  •  6 mths ago
      When the moons hit your eye like a two big pizza pies, that amore...
    • The Truth Hurts  •  6 mths ago
      "The Big Splat?" I thought that's what they called Lindsay Lohan's carrer.
    • Armelle Clesca  •  6 mths ago
      I miss Stargate SG1... Lol
    • BeachBum  •  6 mths ago
      And the cow jumped over the moon(s).
    • chuck  •  6 mths ago
      why not three?
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