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I wonder what China thinks about the moon now that they've seen the alien base there. Surely the aliens won't allow them to turn it into a Death Star. And if the Chinese do try to make that happen, what happens on earth? War?
While China's landing on the moon shows they have the technology, I don't know what scientific significance it will have. Maybe it will demonstrate how it could be used on other bodies in the solar system. The more we can do with unmanned equipment, the better we can explore distant bodies. It's way too cumbersome to send humans on long voyages. We are too fragile and need too many resources on the voyage.
While China's landing on the moon shows they have the technology, I don't know what scientific significance it will have. Maybe it will demonstrate how it could be used on other bodies in the solar system. The more we can do with unmanned equipment, the better we can explore distant bodies. It's way too cumbersome to send humans on long voyages. We are too fragile and need too many resources on the voyage.
It has been deduced that an asteroid struck the Earth at the end of the Cretaceous era because of the layer of Iridium that is found at the Cretaceous /Tertiary boundary. Supposedly the Earth doesn't have much Iridium but asteroids have a lot of it. Isn't the Earth an accretion of asteroids? Shouldn't it have similar composition to the asteroids? Is the Earth's Iridium locked in it's core?
The Earth is formed from dust and gas that clumped together.
The Earth has an iron core. Consensius is that when the Earth was still molten an iron asteroid hit the Earth and it sunk to the core. It's also believed that's how the Moon was formed, when the iron asteroid hit the Earth it spewed dust out into space. Some of that dust stayed in the Earth's gravitational pull, that dust formed a ring around the Earth. Eventually the dust clumped up and formed the moon, just like how the Earth formed from dust clumping leftover from the creation of the sun.
Nova on PBS has been really stepping up there game lately. .
It has been deduced that an asteroid struck the Earth at the end of the Cretaceous era because of the layer of Iridium that is found at the Cretaceous /Tertiary boundary. Supposedly the Earth doesn't have much Iridium but asteroids have a lot of it. Isn't the Earth an accretion of asteroids? Shouldn't it have similar composition to the asteroids? Is the Earth's Iridium locked in it's core?
likely not...that theory is just that...a theory. Based on what we have, but the chances it's the case are low as all hell.
The Earth is formed from God.
So where did the planets come from in your mind?
The solar system as far as we know has been relatively stable for all of recorded human memory...which is a small amount of time. It may have been the case that our solar system has been in unstable states in the very recent past as well, even within the time humans have been around.
I'd say if the solar system has been and/or stays stable for billions of years the current ideas about planet formation are very good...I'm guessing in the time the solar system has been around it's captured and lost a few major, even planetary size pieces...kuiper belt is peculiar.
On second thought though, the accretion disk idea seems to make perfect sense in a vacuum, which is probably as far as it should be taken given what we know.
Is there anything you don't have authoritative certain knowledge about
You even know how all the planets formed
Iridium in the geological record means nothing , throw that theory out too