View Full Version : The Moon Lies Within Earth's Atmosphere, Claims Study
Star Tsar
26th February 2019, 10:48
Hello Avalonians & Avalonettes what do you think of this new assertion? & How will it change our understanding of our solar system?
Nemesis Maturity
The Moon Lies Within Earth's Atmosphere Claims Study
Published 24th February 2019
http://data1.ibtimes.co.in/en/full/631144/earths-troposphere-environment.jpg
Our planet's atmosphere (the hydrogen geocorona) is much larger than first thought, extending far beyond the moon according to a new study by scientists.
Read all about it here: https://www.rt.com/news/452091-moon-inside-earth-atmosphere/ & http://sci.esa.int/soho/61130-earth-atmosphere-stretches-out-to-the-moon-and-beyond/ & https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2018JA026136 & https://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/hotshot/index.html/
NPkNALuyAfk
Bill Ryan
26th February 2019, 12:05
Well, that's going to be so totally misunderstood by a whole bunch of silly YouTubers that we can now expect a slew of grossly misleading videos about it. And John Lear might have a field day. :)
Of course, we're talking about a VERY VERY VERY VERY thin scattering of hydrogen molecules, but there's something just a little tiny bit there.
It's really all about the definition of a vacuum. The rest is journalistic hype with headlines written by editors with no knowledge of science.
Bill Ryan
26th February 2019, 13:17
It's really all about the definition of a vacuum. The rest is journalistic hype with headlines written by editors with no knowledge of science.
In fact, a little more. The RT article is a bit sensational (hence my 'editors' comment ^^ ), but the best popular articles (as one might expect) are from the ESA and NASA. They both contain the same text.
http://sci.esa.int/soho/61130-earth-atmosphere-stretches-out-to-the-moon-and-beyond
https://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/hotshot/index.html
This paragraph in both articles explains the numbers:
The new study revealed that sunlight compresses hydrogen atoms in the geocorona on Earth's dayside, and also produces a region of enhanced density on the night side. The denser dayside region of hydrogen is still rather sparse, with just 70 atoms per cubic centimeter at 60 000 kilometers above Earth's surface, and about 0.2 atoms at the Moon's distance.
So way out at the moon, that's 1 hydrogen atom in every 5 cubic centimeters. Not quite an interstellar vacuum. But hardly an 'atmosphere' in the way most people would understand the word.
:)
Star Tsar
26th February 2019, 17:29
Thanks Bill,
looking forward I wonder what that will mean for terraforming/geoengineering...
:bearhug:
Bill Ryan
26th February 2019, 18:21
Thanks Bill,
looking forward I wonder what that will mean for terraforming/geoengineering...
:bearhug:
Nothing at all. 1 hydrogen atom in every 5 cubic centimeters is a vacuum for all practical purposes!
Sunny-side-up
27th February 2019, 10:44
I seem to think this observation came out years ago?
Hmm!
TargeT
27th February 2019, 12:15
Thanks Bill,
looking forward I wonder what that will mean for terraforming/geoengineering...
:bearhug:
Nothing at all. 1 hydrogen atom in every 5 cubic centimeters is a vacuum for all practical purposes!
This is what click bait journalism gets you, eh?
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