Inside Science
/
Article

What Would Happen If There Were No Moon?

DEC 02, 2015
Eclipses would be a thing of the past.
What Would Happen If There Were No Moon?

Image

half moon

Media credits

NASA.gov

(Inside Science TV) -- The moon -- it can appear full, shining like a beacon in the night or just a sliver of a nightlight. Still, it’s always there.

But what if we didn’t have a moon?

Here’s the top five things we would miss without it.

1. Nights would be much, much darker. The next brightest object in the night sky is Venus. But it still wouldn’t be enough to light up the sky. A full moon is nearly two thousand times brighter than Venus is at its brightest.

2. Without the moon, a day on earth would only last six to twelve hours. There could be more than a thousand days in one year! That’s because the Earth’s rotation slows down over time thanks to the gravitational force -- or pull of the moon -- and without it, days would go by in a blink.


More About the Moon from Inside Science

What Makes a Modern ‘Moonshot’ Successful?

The Moon’s Ancient Magnetic Field Helped Protect the Young Earth

Mining the Moon


3. A moonless earth would also change the size of ocean tides -- making them about one-third as high as they are now.

Image

tide diagram

Media credits

Cliparthut.com

4. Forget about seeing any lunar eclipses -- or any solar eclipses -- without the moon, there would be nothing to block the sun.

5. Without a moon the tilt of our earth’s axis would vary over time. This could create some very wild weather. Right now, thanks to our moon, our axis stays tilted at twenty-three point five degrees. But without the moon the earth might tilt too far over or hardly tilt at all leading to no seasons or even extreme seasons.

Image

spinning globe

Media credits

NASA.gov

Without the moon helping to keep the earth on a steady tilt, scientists have even imagined that life on earth may not have evolved the way we know it.

So the next time you look up at the night sky, realize that the moon is making life here on earth shine bright.

More Science News
/
Article
/
Article
Performing X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy with ungrounded samples requires additional considerations to avoid spectra misinterpretation.
/
Article
2.5-dimensional cell growth approaches, enhanced by plasmas, are the likely future for applications in medicine and agriculture.
/
Article
A sensitive matter-wave interferometer measuring moiré fringes offers force sensitivity comparable to quantum interference experiments.
/
Article
The relative size of a water droplet determines the kinetic processes that occur when ozone is taken up at the air-water interface.
/
Article
With strong magnetic fields and intense lasers or pulsed electric currents, physicists can reconstruct the conditions inside astrophysical objects and create nuclear-fusion reactors.
/
Article
The finding that the Saturnian moon may host layers of icy slush instead of a global ocean could change how planetary scientists think about other icy moons as well.
/
Article
/
Article
After a foray into international health and social welfare, she returned to the physical sciences. She is currently at the Moore Foundation.
/
Article
Modeling the shapes of tree branches, neurons, and blood vessels is a thorny problem, but researchers have just discovered that much of the math has already been done.