Whether it’s the most interesting, the most beautiful, or the strangest one for you, which is, in your opinion, the best moon in the Solar System?

Could it be the Earth’s own moon, being so large in comparison to the size of our Planet? Perhaps little Phobos and Deimos of Mars? The Galilean moons of Jupiter? Titan, Saturn’s largest moon and the only one in the Solar System with a thick atmosphere? Farther out, you have the moons of Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto…

  • 474D@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Gotta go with our boy, our own moon. There’s something to be said about appreciating what you’ve got. It stabilizes our planet, protects us from minor meteors, gives us a beautiful ocean tides, and looks amazing almost every night we see it. We have an idea of what all the other cool moons in our solar system might look like, but ours is pretty great right in front of us. Love the mystique of basic biological chemicals found on it in recent times. It’s been there since we were just kids looking at the sky, letting us know the universe is way bigger than we can imagine.

    • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Our moon is definitely the most important body in the solar system after the sun and earth. There’s a good chance life is only possible on earth because of the moon.

      The thing is, here on earth, we have this wealth of life and diversity, but we only have this diversity because we have a diversity of elements to work with. On most planets, we don’t see this diversity of elements, the same proportion of heavy elements have to be there somewhere, but we don’t see them on the surface. We’re pretty sure that this is because on other planets we don’t see plate tectonics. The process of plate tectonics churns and mixes the earth, it brings heavier elements that would normally be trapped underground back up to the surface.

      The crazy part, is that we’re not 100% sure why we have plate tectonics, and why all the other planets in our solar system don’t. But a leading theory is that plate tectonics are sustained by the tidal forces of a very large moon.

      If this interpretation is accurate, we really owe so much to the moon. Its continued gravitational force on the earth is what has made everything (life, intelligence, society, technology) possible.

      Also, in a Drake equation/Fermi Paradox context, the perfect moon may very well be the extremely rare event that makes the earth truly special.

    • SaraTonin@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It’s also, by pure coincidence, the exact size and distance to make it appear to be the same size as the sun in the sky, making total eclipses really cool

    • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Luna is the only moon in the Solar System which is appropriately-sized relative to its planet’s distance from the Sun and its own orbital distance to create impressive total solar eclipses. If a moon is too small, it won’t cover up the Sun fully, and if it is too big, it will cover up all the light and you would see nothing but darkness.