Will we ever be able to view the far side of our moon from Earth?, page
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reply posted on 29-5-2008 @ 09:24 AM by Mirthful Me
This may help...

en.wikipedia.org...

We are limited to viewing about 59% of the Moon's surface from Earth



reply posted on 29-5-2008 @ 12:25 PM by Soylent Green Is People
reply to post by KATSUO



I bet it has slipped position over the years...

...but humans have only been keeping astronomical records (and any records for that matter) for only about 5000 years -- that's just a blink of an eye when it comes to the history of the Earth-Moon system.

Heck, even 250,000 years is just a "fleeting moment" in the history of the Moon, but 250,000 years ago modern man did not even exist to see the Moon.


[edit on 5/29/2008 by Soylent Green Is People]


reply posted on 29-5-2008 @ 02:00 PM by ArMaP
reply to post by genma



50 years?

No, I don't think the Moon will change its distance, orbiting speed or rotation speed in such a way to make its orbit not locked to Earth in 50 years.

Judging by the difference in the number of craters on the far when compared to the near side, the Moon must have kept this orbit for many thousands of years, so I think it will be some more thousands until it changes it enough for us to see "the whole of the Moon".

Unless there is some disaster, and in that case I don't think that anyone would be here to look at the Moon.

Oh, and Planet X is just another baseless theory.


reply posted on 29-5-2008 @ 02:06 PM by ArMaP
reply to post by Solarskye



It looks the same as all other images from the far side, and it's not that different (only in resolution) from those from Luna 3 taken in 1959.


reply posted on 29-5-2008 @ 03:26 PM by nablator
Originally posted by ArMaP
Judging by the difference in the number of craters on the far when compared to the near side, the Moon must have kept this orbit for many thousands of years, so I think it will be some more thousands until it changes it enough for us to see "the whole of the Moon".

Thousands? It's been the same side for billions of years actually. According to
Wikipedia tidal locking occurred over a very short timescale of a thousand years or less.

Originally posted by KATSUO
wouldnt it slip.. adjust.. move a little.. over time..
being as wobbly as it is...

Tidal lock is not a coincidence, it is the result of tides slowing down the rotation of the Moon. I mean it's an ongoing process. Tidal lock is here to stay. Would you expect a spinning ball to start rotating again, just a bit, after it has stopped spinning? The "wobble" (libration), OTOH, is a consequence of the non-uniform speed of the Moon around the Earth.

Originally posted by Shadow_Lord
Short term, no. Long term, probably. The Moon is locked with the Earth at it's current orbit distance. That distance is slowly changing. So thousands of years (maybe just a few hundred) as the distance changes, the rotation will no longer match the orbit speed.

No, the rotation period will continue to increase to match the revolution period.

[edit on 2008-5-29 by nablator]


reply posted on 29-5-2008 @ 03:48 PM by nablator
According to another Wikipedia article about Lunar mare (seas), tidal despinning is predicted to have occurred quickly (on the order to 10s of millions of years).
Anything under a billion years is "quick".
Why all the large maria are on the nearside is unknown. Interesting.
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