I wouldn’t hold my breath for Mars (a permanent colony just doesn’t make sense there). The moon, however, is almost guaranteed. Not only are there a whole host of scientific, economic, and strategic reasons to colonize it, the political incentives for funding it are there and almost identical to those that got us there the first time.
I’m 80 and have come to the conclusion that there is nothing good about the moon’s regolith. It gets into everything and destroys whatever moves or rotates.
*Moon Update: Patch 2024 Installed* - Updated moon gas refresh rate. - Crater textures upgraded. - Moon-cave biome added. - Orbital stability improved. - fixed bug where moon would sometimes block sun. No downtime expected. Enjoy the new features!
Are you sure you fixed the sunblocking bug! Sheesh! Its about time! Man that one is so annoying! all my neigbors running outside with tamborines and horns and stuff trying to scare off some creature eating the sun. One cant even enjoy hacking the matrix for a lil time travel with out that bug having caused some sorta ruckus like this.
Thanks! With 1M+ members you could let more of us become members at $0.99. Missed opportunity I'd say. I like your Space Race and Destination videos the best.
God this video was so exciting to watch, the concept of another space race is so amazing. So much of this could advance us leaps and bounds and if we find ourselves getting back there and forming colonies it might be what we need to come together as a species and move on to the next stage of our civilization
Honestly I don't get why everybody is so nuts about immediately colonising Mars. Let's start with the moon, develop technologies, gather experience, and start missions way more effective from the moon, than from Earth's gravitational well. Moon for the win!
Then you should read The Case For Mars. Although lacking in carbon and other vitals, the Moon can and should be developed. Those who do will always be subject to Earthbound governmental whims. The cops are just too close. Only Mars is isolated enough to spawn a new independent branch of human civilization. One thing I would say has changed since the book was written in 1996 is that we no longer need to choose one or the other, as the era of privately funded off-world exploration is finally beginning. This is fortunate as NASA's will to send humans anywhere beyond LEO can no longer be called serious.
Ha he has no idea what's going on with the moon , don't fall for his self ideal of being a scientist... if Anton did research without bias! He would know ufos/ uap.. aliens/ are real
H. G. Wells' book "First Men in the Moon" predicted underground settlements on the Moon, a long, long time ago. Just saying. We could use some "Cavorite." ;--)
I still think of the toddler pointing out the window at the moon, trying to make his mum and dad happy, saying, "Look! There's Neil!" A wonderful, wonderful kid.
Neil, huh Thats cool I need to find happiness in more simple things like this I always try way too hard to find deeper meaning and its causing me to miss the point.
@@Libertaro-i2uSolotubes to bring in filtered sunlight. Although, it’s about 336 hours of daylight and 336 hours of night in a lunar day. So, any way you crack it, artificial light will be important.
No kidding right? We need planetary time not GMT. And an extensible extrapolation from sector 001... that's better than making us the center alpha quadrant in the sol system. Some system that expresses abstraction in both location and time... after all the Romulon and Klimgons seem to have derived the same system. Or perhaps the federation got it from the vulcans instead of inventing it. So, that's an example to reveal the most generic universal method... we have to figure that out.
Living in caves sounds like easy construction until you consider long term risk. There was big opening to a cave that didn't go back very far and I mentioned to an engineer friend that it would be cool to build a mostly glass wall over the opening and maybe pour some concrete beams or gunite the ceiling to prevent rocks falling. His comment was "How much of that hill do you plan on supporting?" I went back a decade later and much of the roof was on the floor, he was right about the cave.
There are inunmerable factors that are different on the Moon than on Earth -here are the main ones. 1. Gravity is 1/6th, thus less mechanical stress on the rock formations. 2. Erosion a. No water seeping through rocks as a result of precipitation and surface water flow. b. No moisture in the atmosphere that can attack the rocks. c. No alkali or acidic minerals that can become airborne to attack or otherwise erode the rocks. d. Bacterial and micro-organism activity damaging the rock layers over geologic time weakens them 3. Tectonic activity on Earth is at least 100,000 times that of the Moon - even is relatively inactive areas of the planet, there are Earth tremors constantly, below human detection limits (equipment detects them) - this constant activity on Earth significantly impacts the stability of caves and similar structures over geologic times scales. 4. Temperature changes - Yes, the Moon undergoes temperatures changes on a much larger scale that Earth does, but these are constant and on a regular timescale, on Earth, the temperature changes also accompany air pressure changes, moisture changes etc etc - all have an impact on rock. 5. Lava tubes are made from basalt, a very dense and mechanical strong rock - most caves in the UK are eroded out of sedimentary rock, which are generally mechanically much weaker than basalt, further, being constructed by layers, moisture and other contaminants can intrude into the layers and split them apart, further weakening the rocks, resulting in collapse. When you add all these factors together, you can see why may caves ultimately collapse on Earth unless they are made from harder, more stable rocks or are otherwise protected from environmental factors.
A cool thing about the Moon not having an atmosphere is you can inflate your habitat inside the caves and the very air you'll be living in will be part of the support structure.
@@Atok595 Humans explore because it is there! We pursue knowledge and wealth, whether on the sea floor, Antarctica, caves, or the moon. Humanity has always and will always have individuals who have the need to explore new places, and to the benefit of all the rest of us. Human exploration is not "too expensive", and the payback is enormous, even if it cannot be measured in monetary terms. Anyone who doesn't want to risk their life in exploration does not have to; those who do should be allowed to.
There needs to be a cost benefit analysis comparing the two methods of shielding for habitats. 1: building inside lava tubes and caves. 2: burying surface structures with regolith. It seems like unmanned surface dozers pushing up mounds of lunar dirt is the more technologically accesable/cheaper option and also one that allows construction in areas without lava tubes.
So clocks on the moon are faster than clocks on the earth by about 58 microseconds per day because of its lower gravity. Very interesting. Thank you Anton.❤
Very interesting indeed, Anton. Thank-you. It will be enlightening to learn about other molecules that are present in that sample. I saw Ammonium ions and Chlorine mentioned in those graphs. This raises the question, 'How easy would it be to extract potable water from it, by freeing it from high levels of toxins?'
ANTON can you explore the electric universe? all planets and stars embedded in plasma - the plasma discharges make spots as those found on the moon and of course magnetic anomalies are ALWAYS associated with ionized plasma. the plasma does not answer all questions but does answer more than gravity based concept. You are the best on the internet. thank you.
QUESTION for the lunar geologists and terrestrial geologists/volcanologists: Are terrestrial geological movements and lunar geological movements influencing each other? The Moon influences water bodies, is there something similar between terrestrial and lunar lava/magma?
@@ferrumignis and yet the video discusses possible lunar magma, which suggests tectonics. And once upon a time people thought that human women were born with all the primordial follicles they would ever have and that human spermatocytes were formed *inside* Sertoli cells and that those weird shapes in the telescopes were "spiral nebula" not full on galaxies
Per Relativity time is relative. Clocks on the Moon, Mars, etc. tick at different rates because gravity and velocity are different on each. Even GPS satellites clocks have to be adjusted because of their distance from the Earth and their orbital velocity.
Thank you Anton. We should have stayed on the moon fifty five years ago! Humans would be well on our way to Mars by now with the new technology we would have developed.
With the enormous amount of Bolides striking the Moon over the Eons and it having no real means of Erosion except for Cosmic Rays you'd think there'd be a layering of Rare Earth Metals just below the surface waiting to be sweep up & refined.
Hey! I dont care if you can spell or you capitalize things that dontt need to be capitalized and believe it or not most people dont. if you are interested in this stuff and you got something to add, add it, theres gonna be someone like me who has a vast amount od trivial science knowledge cause i have no life and watch things like these kids of videos to fill time, but has never heard of bolides and will now go look them up because of your comment. Keep up the good commenting!
@@jamesleatherwood5125 Incompetence in communication in English derives in part from such disregard. Titus-as-a-Roman may be doing better than most. Erosion on the Moon is mediated by micrometeorites as well as cosmic rays.
Bit of an off-topic question: Is anyone looking into potentially adapting something like the Boston Dynamics robot “dogs” for lunar/planetary surface exploration? Seems like the ability to walk might make them better suited to uneven and varied terrain than a wheeled robot.
Basicly if you look at it, you have a endosphere that has an atmosphere and the residual traces are detected due to a bleeding slow venting. Just as you would get on a.....?
Hi Anton. I have a question about the moon which I posted before, here again. Why are most of the 'craters' on the moon circular in shape? Considering the randomness of the trajectories of comets and meteors, they should be mostly elliptical, no?
So much has been found out about the moon in the last few years and none of it makes sense! Love that! I'm told they may switch to walkers instead of rovers, which should (hopefully) be able to walk into those lava tubes on the moon and Mars. I wish I were younger!
Earth atmospheric pressure on the moon could support about 60 tons per square meter, or about 20-30m of overlying rock and regolith. If lava tubes are only about 20-30m deep, then one atmosphere of pressure could support the tubes against collapse
Gravitational forces affect the rate at which time passes for objects within that gravitational field. Think of it as a kind of drag, but with time. For example, satellites in orbit around the earth move through time more quickly than we do on earth. The difference is super small, but exists. Satellite clocks run a tiny bit slower to compensate. Objects that are super massive like black holes have a much more noticeable effect. One hour for someone close to a black hole could be years for people far away if I remember correctly.
Time dilation via gravity would be caused by a heavier section of a planet/moon etc if a denser or lighter portion of the crust was under you than another mearsured spot, even if you were measuring different spots on the same planet or moon.
I wonder what they are going to call the inhabitants of the moon? Luneys? Mooneys? I’m almost sure they will call the Mars settlers Martians. Not that that’s going to happen anytime soon.
I'm 100% positive we can make a very very strong solar powered or nuclear powered magnetic Shield for any base we put on the moon. We can make an isolated Shield more powerful than Earth's magnetic field for a local area
I liked this video, China has spoken about using the lava tubes to build research center. But one thing noone is talking about, and I believe it should be mentioned, is the benefits of these investigations. I agree that research is always beneficial, but, to bring in more needed cash flow, and maybe public companies into this new era, ppl need to know what type of monetary benifits can be "mined" from the moon... Please make a video showing the benefits of such colossal investments...I know there's gotta be some, I hope!
@TraumaQueen65 I agree...hell, take 50%...afterall, what good are they for anyway? Organizing coups arround the world that bring top dollar for a handfull of guys while making the entire world MAD at USA?
Always wondered how the moon helps to create and maintain earths lavaflows and internal heat but people think earth which has way more mass doesnt do that for the moon. Guess we are getting there?
Does slower time on the Moon only affect clocks, or does it affect time in an absolute / universal manner. For example will biological organisms age slower on the moon?Are organic processes slowed down too, perhaps causing them to live longer on average on the moon or other places where time dilation is occuring compared to similar organisms on the earth?
The Moon has a gaseous surface film - awesome Maybe it's venting something from the sub-surface. Or, Apollo 18 was less monster movie and more nature documentary
Every day Anton manages to release fresh new content that's actually worth hearing, and not just filler. Always impressive.
Magnetic anomaly? Yay, the second monolith. Jupiter here we come. Go Dave! 🚀🖖🏻
monkey smashing another monkey with a bone intensifies
"I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that"
Dave's not here, man! 😁
😂
Erm.... achktchually it was Dr. Floyd who went to investigate the magnetic anomaly 🤓☝
At age 76 having heard the first landing on the Moon -- I hope to live to see a permanent colony on the Moon and Mars
I wouldn’t hold my breath for Mars (a permanent colony just doesn’t make sense there). The moon, however, is almost guaranteed. Not only are there a whole host of scientific, economic, and strategic reasons to colonize it, the political incentives for funding it are there and almost identical to those that got us there the first time.
I’m 80 and have come to the conclusion that there is nothing good about the moon’s regolith. It gets into everything and destroys whatever moves or rotates.
No one alive today will ever see a trip to Mars. It is that hard.
Mars for the Billionaires, moon for us, and the sun for politicians 🎉
I hope you do to Sir. We’re living in a time of miracles aren’t we.
*Moon Update: Patch 2024 Installed*
- Updated moon gas refresh rate.
- Crater textures upgraded.
- Moon-cave biome added.
- Orbital stability improved.
- fixed bug where moon would sometimes block sun.
No downtime expected. Enjoy the new features!
Usually a patch to a program is "applied."
Are you sure you fixed the sunblocking bug! Sheesh! Its about time! Man that one is so annoying! all my neigbors running outside with tamborines and horns and stuff trying to scare off some creature eating the sun. One cant even enjoy hacking the matrix for a lil time travel with out that bug having caused some sorta ruckus like this.
You forgot:
*removed Herobrine
you forgot the nuclear moon rotation starter pack. That was added too.
My Moon keeps crashing I had to upload an earlier version before the latest patch
Thanks
The link between time and gravity always feels so unnatural yet cool
Thanks! With 1M+ members you could let more of us become members at $0.99. Missed opportunity I'd say. I like your Space Race and Destination videos the best.
Thanks!
God this video was so exciting to watch, the concept of another space race is so amazing. So much of this could advance us leaps and bounds and if we find ourselves getting back there and forming colonies it might be what we need to come together as a species and move on to the next stage of our civilization
LOL
China will win. Easily.
Nice dream. I only hope Elon is NOT in charge
Honestly I don't get why everybody is so nuts about immediately colonising Mars. Let's start with the moon, develop technologies, gather experience, and start missions way more effective from the moon, than from Earth's gravitational well.
Moon for the win!
Exactly! It's a gravitational stepping stone and training center.
Then you should read The Case For Mars. Although lacking in carbon and other vitals, the Moon can and should be developed. Those who do will always be subject to Earthbound governmental whims. The cops are just too close. Only Mars is isolated enough to spawn a new independent branch of human civilization.
One thing I would say has changed since the book was written in 1996 is that we no longer need to choose one or the other, as the era of privately funded off-world exploration is finally beginning. This is fortunate as NASA's will to send humans anywhere beyond LEO can no longer be called serious.
Both. And Peter Beck can work on Venus.
We can learn a lot from doing moon bases before we dive deeper into space i think
They definitely should wait on going to Mars. We’re not ready for that.
You always bring us such great info Anton! Thanks!
On these magnetic anomalies. Anyone think to check Tycho yet?
Yes, they did in 2001.
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🥃
T.M.A.
You do a delightful job of hitting highlights about the moon. Stay wonderful, Anton.
I echo this!
Ha he has no idea what's going on with the moon , don't fall for his self ideal of being a scientist... if Anton did research without bias! He would know ufos/ uap.. aliens/ are real
H. G. Wells' book "First Men in the Moon" predicted underground settlements on the Moon, a long, long time ago. Just saying. We could use some "Cavorite." ;--)
I love the film adaptation. A clear inspiration for The Geonosans in Attack of The Clones.
troglodyte literally means cave dweller.
Just finished reading it (again) about an hour ago
Spoiler alert
I still think of the toddler pointing out the window at the moon, trying to make his mum and dad happy, saying, "Look! There's Neil!" A wonderful, wonderful kid.
Neil, huh
Thats cool I need to find happiness in more simple things like this I always try way too hard to find deeper meaning and its causing me to miss the point.
M-o-o-n. That spells Tom Cullen!
@@jasongarcia2140. Neil Armstrong. You know, the first person to walk on the moon.
Are you referring to Antons son Neil?
@@magiegainey5036I was gonna say that 😁
I am so excited about Lava Tube colonies. I hope this happens within my lifetime!
With transparent skylights enclosing the entrances, the lunarians will doubtlessly appreciate natural light.
@@Libertaro-i2uSolotubes to bring in filtered sunlight. Although, it’s about 336 hours of daylight and 336 hours of night in a lunar day. So, any way you crack it, artificial light will be important.
Awesome video, Thanks Anton 👌
No, your awesome ❤
Keep being wonderful Anton!!
Captain's log, stardate 471.702
No kidding right? We need planetary time not GMT. And an extensible extrapolation from sector 001... that's better than making us the center alpha quadrant in the sol system. Some system that expresses abstraction in both location and time... after all the Romulon and Klimgons seem to have derived the same system. Or perhaps the federation got it from the vulcans instead of inventing it. So, that's an example to reveal the most generic universal method... we have to figure that out.
Thanks for your hard work and dedication Anton.
Living in caves sounds like easy construction until you consider long term risk. There was big opening to a cave that didn't go back very far and I mentioned to an engineer friend that it would be cool to build a mostly glass wall over the opening and maybe pour some concrete beams or gunite the ceiling to prevent rocks falling. His comment was "How much of that hill do you plan on supporting?" I went back a decade later and much of the roof was on the floor, he was right about the cave.
Reminder that everything weighs 1/6 on the moon of what it does on earth. If you can build the structure to support it I don’t think it’s an issue
duct tape
There are inunmerable factors that are different on the Moon than on Earth -here are the main ones.
1. Gravity is 1/6th, thus less mechanical stress on the rock formations.
2. Erosion
a. No water seeping through rocks as a result of precipitation and surface water flow.
b. No moisture in the atmosphere that can attack the rocks.
c. No alkali or acidic minerals that can become airborne to attack or otherwise erode the rocks.
d. Bacterial and micro-organism activity damaging the rock layers over geologic time weakens them
3. Tectonic activity on Earth is at least 100,000 times that of the Moon - even is relatively inactive areas of the planet, there are Earth tremors constantly, below human detection limits (equipment detects them) - this constant activity on Earth significantly impacts the stability of caves and similar structures over geologic times scales.
4. Temperature changes - Yes, the Moon undergoes temperatures changes on a much larger scale that Earth does, but these are constant and on a regular timescale, on Earth, the temperature changes also accompany air pressure changes, moisture changes etc etc - all have an impact on rock.
5. Lava tubes are made from basalt, a very dense and mechanical strong rock - most caves in the UK are eroded out of sedimentary rock, which are generally mechanically much weaker than basalt, further, being constructed by layers, moisture and other contaminants can intrude into the layers and split them apart, further weakening the rocks, resulting in collapse.
When you add all these factors together, you can see why may caves ultimately collapse on Earth unless they are made from harder, more stable rocks or are otherwise protected from environmental factors.
A cool thing about the Moon not having an atmosphere is you can inflate your habitat inside the caves and the very air you'll be living in will be part of the support structure.
@@tiagotiagot Nope - not that easy.
Thank you Anton, that was a fun topic! Hello wonderful people
Thank you Anton for this beautiful channel
Can’t wait till we go back to the moon.
We? Ain’t no we, just a few astronauts doing dirt related stuff. Really it’s a huge waste of money. Probes are more efficient.
@@Atok595 Humans explore because it is there! We pursue knowledge and wealth, whether on the sea floor, Antarctica, caves, or the moon. Humanity has always and will always have individuals who have the need to explore new places, and to the benefit of all the rest of us. Human exploration is not "too expensive", and the payback is enormous, even if it cannot be measured in monetary terms.
Anyone who doesn't want to risk their life in exploration does not have to; those who do should be allowed to.
Back?
You're grounded.
@user-sx9hq7qwert this guy
Very interesting great video,thanks 👍❤
Thanks for the video Anton. Cheers mate!
Magnetic anomalies... Probably monoliths. 😊
…Or should I say moonoliths?
There needs to be a cost benefit analysis comparing the two methods of shielding for habitats. 1: building inside lava tubes and caves. 2: burying surface structures with regolith.
It seems like unmanned surface dozers pushing up mounds of lunar dirt is the more technologically accesable/cheaper option and also one that allows construction in areas without lava tubes.
Thanks Anton, you're much appreciated.
Thanks for the video.
Good episode Anton! Thank you sharing!!!
Tintin and Haddock allready explored the caves in Explorers on Moon. 😉
So clocks on the moon are faster than clocks on the earth by about 58 microseconds per day because of its lower gravity. Very interesting. Thank you Anton.❤
Very interesting indeed, Anton. Thank-you.
It will be enlightening to learn about other molecules that are present in that sample. I saw Ammonium ions and Chlorine mentioned in those graphs. This raises the question, 'How easy would it be to extract potable water from it, by freeing it from high levels of toxins?'
Some areas had ancient Vulcanism, causing them to live long and prosper.
ANTON can you explore the electric universe? all planets and stars embedded in plasma - the plasma discharges make spots as those found on the moon and of course magnetic anomalies are ALWAYS associated with ionized plasma. the plasma does not answer all questions but does answer more than gravity based concept. You are the best on the internet. thank you.
For true!
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 💙✌️
Thank you.
They found the Monolith!
Rocky & Bullwinkle discovered "Mad Moon Munching Monsters!"
NASA: "We want to go back to the moon"
Butch and Suni: "We'd like to come back to earth first"
My favorite subject!
QUESTION for the lunar geologists and terrestrial geologists/volcanologists:
Are terrestrial geological movements and lunar geological movements influencing each other?
The Moon influences water bodies, is there something similar between terrestrial and lunar lava/magma?
There is no molten lava on the moon, it's solid.
@@ferrumignis and yet the video discusses possible lunar magma, which suggests tectonics.
And once upon a time people thought that human women were born with all the primordial follicles they would ever have and that human spermatocytes were formed *inside* Sertoli cells and that those weird shapes in the telescopes were "spiral nebula" not full on galaxies
@@TheKrispyfort The video discusses lava tubes, which have been known about for a long time.
Lunar temperature drops to -180 degrees C at night. That's cold!
Maybe by digging underground, and insulating...
Otherwise, it's a lunar day trip.
Fission reactor or decay generators solve the night time problem.
Did NASA watch Star Wars? “This isn’t a cave”
Lava tube is close enough
Space worms
It makes sense to normalize time passage for the Moon AND Mars. Time for expansion of the Almanac.
Per Relativity time is relative. Clocks on the Moon, Mars, etc. tick at different rates because gravity and velocity are different on each. Even GPS satellites clocks have to be adjusted because of their distance from the Earth and their orbital velocity.
Great channel!
Cool find anton!
Thank you for everything, always.
😮🎉😅
Maybe the magnetism is attracting iron dust particles from micrometeorites and the dust raised from impacts?
🙋♀️💖 thanks anton, I'm learning everyday
BEAUTIFUL!!! worx
Thank you Anton. We should have stayed on the moon fifty five years ago! Humans would be well on our way to Mars by now with the new technology we would have developed.
True. But the public is fickle, ans would rather have generous welfare benefits.
I do hope we can et a space ship down one of these holes!
Let's go with StarDates!
Thanks for all you do
With the enormous amount of Bolides striking the Moon over the Eons and it having no real means of Erosion except for Cosmic Rays you'd think there'd be a layering of Rare Earth Metals just below the surface waiting to be sweep up & refined.
The only words which should be capitalized above are "With" and "Moon".
@@rdbchase Word nazi!
Hey! I dont care if you can spell or you capitalize things that dontt need to be capitalized and believe it or not most people dont. if you are interested in this stuff and you got something to add, add it, theres gonna be someone like me who has a vast amount od trivial science knowledge cause i have no life and watch things like these kids of videos to fill time, but has never heard of bolides and will now go look them up because of your comment. Keep up the good commenting!
@@jamesleatherwood5125 Incompetence in communication in English derives in part from such disregard. Titus-as-a-Roman may be doing better than most. Erosion on the Moon is mediated by micrometeorites as well as cosmic rays.
Capitalism baby! Let’s tare into that sucker.
Bit of an off-topic question: Is anyone looking into potentially adapting something like the Boston Dynamics robot “dogs” for lunar/planetary surface exploration? Seems like the ability to walk might make them better suited to uneven and varied terrain than a wheeled robot.
Basicly if you look at it, you have a endosphere that has an atmosphere and the residual traces are detected due to a bleeding slow venting. Just as you would get on a.....?
Spelunking < underwater spelunking < lunar spelunking
Great vid bro!!
I love his videos.
thanks Anton!
You´re almost using your full outside voice. Much easier to listen to, keep up the good work!
TMA 1 is calling.
Man I gotta check out these links in the description sometime 🤓
Thank you Anton 🕉️👍🏼
Would one of those magnetic anomalies be in Tycho crater? I suggest the designation TMA-1
Don’t you think its strange they never put a permanent live camera on the moon?
It’s about time we had people living on the moon 👨🏼🚀
Hi Anton. I have a question about the moon which I posted before, here again. Why are most of the 'craters' on the moon circular in shape? Considering the randomness of the trajectories of comets and meteors, they should be mostly elliptical, no?
Great Video ! ! !
So much has been found out about the moon in the last few years and none of it makes sense! Love that! I'm told they may switch to walkers instead of rovers, which should (hopefully) be able to walk into those lava tubes on the moon and Mars. I wish I were younger!
Earth atmospheric pressure on the moon could support about 60 tons per square meter, or about 20-30m of overlying rock and regolith.
If lava tubes are only about 20-30m deep, then one atmosphere of pressure could support the tubes against collapse
So.... Is nanosecond on the moon is not equal to a nanosecond on the earth?? Does the oscillation of say a processor clock also change on the moon???
Interesting, who might measure this? NASA? ESA? JAXA?
just mass diff.. time diff
Gravitational forces affect the rate at which time passes for objects within that gravitational field. Think of it as a kind of drag, but with time. For example, satellites in orbit around the earth move through time more quickly than we do on earth. The difference is super small, but exists. Satellite clocks run a tiny bit slower to compensate. Objects that are super massive like black holes have a much more noticeable effect. One hour for someone close to a black hole could be years for people far away if I remember correctly.
@@cbrew8775also velocity diff (kinematic time dilation.)
Fascinating!
Space aliens for sure 😮
Sounds promising
Time dilation via gravity would be caused by a heavier section of a planet/moon etc if a denser or lighter portion of the crust was under you than another mearsured spot, even if you were measuring different spots on the same planet or moon.
At 4:58…i know our brains are wired to see faces, but that one was like a 3D witch turning her head. Tripped me out for a sec 😅
I don't see it 😕
Amazing!
Wouldn't they have the data about time passage on the moon from past missions?
they do.. butt, it varies alot.. they trying to avg it out
I wonder what they are going to call the inhabitants of the moon? Luneys? Mooneys? I’m almost sure they will call the Mars settlers Martians. Not that that’s going to happen anytime soon.
Illunanati.
Magnetic anomalys ? Any artifacts?
I'm 100% positive we can make a very very strong solar powered or nuclear powered magnetic Shield for any base we put on the moon. We can make an isolated Shield more powerful than Earth's magnetic field for a local area
I liked this video, China has spoken about using the lava tubes to build research center. But one thing noone is talking about, and I believe it should be mentioned, is the benefits of these investigations. I agree that research is always beneficial, but, to bring in more needed cash flow, and maybe public companies into this new era, ppl need to know what type of monetary benifits can be "mined" from the moon...
Please make a video showing the benefits of such colossal investments...I know there's gotta be some, I hope!
Take 1% off the Pentagon's budget and direct it to NASA
@TraumaQueen65
I agree...hell, take 50%...afterall, what good are they for anyway? Organizing coups arround the world that bring top dollar for a handfull of guys while making the entire world MAD at USA?
God i love this guy ❤️
Part of an old Native American story i heard long ago:
"...and the water was still before the moon arrived..."
Hmm...no orig. research resource linked? Strange!
I thought the more mass the slower time goes by? So are you saying it’s backwards?
I like the Moon 🌔
Cause it is close to us
Watching the moon landing with my family when I was a kid I can still remmber my mom complaining about our black and white TV !
Very cool
In terms of molecular beam epitaxy, that’s a very high pressure.
Always wondered how the moon helps to create and maintain earths lavaflows and internal heat but people think earth which has way more mass doesnt do that for the moon. Guess we are getting there?
Does slower time on the Moon only affect clocks, or does it affect time in an absolute / universal manner. For example will biological organisms age slower on the moon?Are organic processes slowed down too, perhaps causing them to live longer on average on the moon or other places where time dilation is occuring compared to similar organisms on the earth?
No links to papers today? Picture me sobbing.
The Moon has a gaseous surface film - awesome
Maybe it's venting something from the sub-surface.
Or, Apollo 18 was less monster movie and more nature documentary
Magnetic anomalies on the moon eh? Are we sure there isn't a buried black monolith causing it?
The children yearn for the mines.
Its mine! You hear? Mine!