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Originally posted by Dae
Originally posted by Arcane Demesne All life has evolved due to the moon's orbit. Even women's menstrual cycles loosely follow the moon, and I doubt that's a coincidence.
Life has evolved despite the moons orbit.
source
The current "favorite" location for the formation of the earliest life is somewhere deep in the oceans, near a hydrothermal vent.
So far as anyone can tell, there would be no impacts on the issue of life on the Earth because, if ocean tides were important in getting life started by, for example, mixing up the so-called 'primordial soup', the solar tides ought to have been more than adequate to have done the same thing 3.5 - 4.0 billion years ago.
The axis of the Earth's rotation in space would point towards the same spot in the sky for 100's of thousands and even millions of years.
The Moon actually seems to stabilize the tilt of the Earth's rotation axis.
Significant effects on weather systems, circulation patterns etc.
Originally posted by b3rgY
Even with public knowledge of modern physicst there is concludion: MASS IS EFFECT.
Another law: everything is vibration and resonance.
With pumpim frequency in lorenz force tornado inside moon you can change trajectories of moon or any planet including Jupiter.
Well it way to primitive to send nuclear projectiles to moon. Way too primitive.
Originally posted by Matyas
Not to get too far off topic here, but unless your target audience are middle school students, your post comes across (at least to me) as rather patronizing.
Originally posted by Matyas
I have maintained over the years there is also an electrodynamic effect which keeps the Moon moving away from us at the rate of about an inch per year.
Originally posted by Matyas
Something else I would like to know is why the libation point is not the same as the barycenter. Could centrifugal "force" (not!) be the reason?
Originally posted by b3rgY
The force which spin this is named LOrenz force. According to military document from DefensiveTechnical Informational Center in DOD it can be simple altered to move ecliptic path where ever is calculated.
Originally posted by b3rgY
Well there is allready tornado INSIDE moon, earth and every object in space. This tornado moves PLASMA into rotational field. It produce magnet poles by the way on one frequency.
The force which spin this is named LOrenz force. According to military document from DefensiveTechnical Informational Center in DOD it can be simple altered to move ecliptic path where ever is calculated.
You tought about wind tornado?
Originally posted by wswbkbroiler
Agreed, I too couldn't find an article saying that it helps us avoid articles. However, the moon is 1/3 the size of the earth, and therefore the is the chance that they would hit it instead of us. At least we have some protection instead of none.
Why would you want to take the chance to eliminate all life from earth?
That may where life started, however now we live on land. I doubt any land animals can live next to a hydrothermal vent underneath hundred of pounds of ocean pressure.
Exactly, that is why we should take that chance. Also, didn't you guys see what Byrd wrote? This guy died in 1999. This is probably a hoax, or a older theory than it claims to be.
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by mikesingh
Professor Alexander Abian, a mathematician at the University of Iowa says it's the only way to rid the world of scorching heat and arctic winters!
Well, he's certainly gotten lively after his death, then. He died in 1999:
en.wikipedia.org...
Space: 1999 Background
Imagine, if you will, an Earth where history did not write that we pulled back after the Apollo missions to the Moon; that we did not turn giant leaps forward into tiny, hesitant, almost backwards crawling motions. Instead, imagine history wrote that after we took those first few steps, we continued taking more, even bolder leaps, expanding lunar exploration, sending ever-increasing numbers of missions--robotic and human-crewed--into the rest of the solar system.
Disasters only increased our international resolve, especially after a brief but nearly catastophic war that vividly reminded us of the value of life, and prompted unprecedented multi-cultural, international cooperation that sped up humanity's progress into space.
By the year 1999, humanity had invented new and more powerful spaceships (including one type named in honor of the first manned lunar lander--"Eagle"), partially domesticated the forces of artificial gravity, taken up permanent residence on the Moon, and was on the verge of launching the first people beyond the confines of our solar system. We were also dealing with the difficult problem of what to do with massive amounts of nuclear waste. Years before, we had begun storing it in special dumps on the far side of the Moon.
This is where Space: 1999 begins.
As the countdown to the launch of humanity's first extra-solar spaceship continues, a new commander is sent to Moonbase Alpha to deal with a deadly situation threatening the launch; while no one is aware that another, more sinister countdown is already underway, one that is set to reach zero much sooner, and affect far more than the mission. People have been dying on Moonbase Alpha, and the new commander quickly finds the very adminstrator who assigned him to deal with the situation has also been obscuring its severity.
Once it becomes clear that the warning signs point to an overlooked form of chain reaction building up in the nuclear waste dumps, they try to stop it. The futility of their attempts becomes horrifyingly clear in the light of a sudden false dawn of an enormous nuclear explosion, which in its minute-long burn acts as a tremendous engine, propelling the Moon out of the solar system, to begin an incredible--however unexpected and involuntary--journey of discovery. They become castaways on a fast-floating island--a Moon they can rarely control--encountering alien beings and forces, as well as other human or no longer quite-so-human castaways.
Source:www.space1999.net
Originally posted by Neon Haze
...
Once it becomes clear that the warning signs point to an overlooked form of chain reaction building up in the nuclear waste dumps, they try to stop it. The futility of their attempts becomes horrifyingly clear in the light of a sudden false dawn of an enormous nuclear explosion, which in its minute-long burn acts as a tremendous engine, propelling the Moon out of the solar system, to begin an incredible--however unexpected and involuntary--journey of discovery. They become castaways on a fast-floating island--a Moon they can rarely control--encountering alien beings and forces, as well as other human or no longer quite-so-human castaways.
Source:www.space1999.net
All the best,
NeoN HaZe.
Originally posted by Neon Haze
Funny that since there was a Sci-Fi about this very subject called...
Originally posted by mikesingh
Wow! That was a super idea for a sci fi flick!! I think I should develop it into another sci fi thriller!! Hitching a ride on a Moon gone berserk and going where no man has gone before!! Explosive adrenalin rush to say the least!!
Originally posted by Byrd
It was horrible.
Trust me on this one. I would have sued to get those hours of my life back if I could.
(and I wanted "Maya" to go fall in a crater somewhere and never be seen again.)