How can a moon have an ever-changing face?
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Imagine an inhabitated planet like ours with a moon of the same projected size in the sky. The moon has visible structures of colors or darker and lighter areas.
Every evening when the moon gets visible in the sky, it's surface changed in at least 1/4 of the visible area. It didn't just rotate, no-one on this planet has ever seen the same image of the moon twice in their life.
How is it possible that the structure or pattern on the surface of a moon changes constantly while the planet is stable enough to support intelligent life?
Edit due to so many answers requiring an atmosphere to work: The moon can have an atmosphere, but the changing patterns must be on a planetary (or moony?) scale and look otherworldly. Simple clouds floating around are too similar to what the natives see every day on their home planet. Giant stoms like on Jupiter are ok, but they have the tendency to repeat their patterns.
science-based moons astronomy
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Imagine an inhabitated planet like ours with a moon of the same projected size in the sky. The moon has visible structures of colors or darker and lighter areas.
Every evening when the moon gets visible in the sky, it's surface changed in at least 1/4 of the visible area. It didn't just rotate, no-one on this planet has ever seen the same image of the moon twice in their life.
How is it possible that the structure or pattern on the surface of a moon changes constantly while the planet is stable enough to support intelligent life?
Edit due to so many answers requiring an atmosphere to work: The moon can have an atmosphere, but the changing patterns must be on a planetary (or moony?) scale and look otherworldly. Simple clouds floating around are too similar to what the natives see every day on their home planet. Giant stoms like on Jupiter are ok, but they have the tendency to repeat their patterns.
science-based moons astronomy
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Related: Always a full Moon for the Emperor - Can this be achieved with solar panels and LEDs?
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– Alexander
Jan 17 at 20:56
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It's Io! Of course, you'd be hard pressed to find a moon with a lot of geological activity without also having Io's conditions. (I.e. Orbiting a gas giant and surrounded by many other moons.) Maybe if the moon somehow formed very recently?
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– Lemma Prism
Jan 17 at 22:33
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Clouds don't necessarily look the same from space as they do from the ground. If you look at images of Earth from space, the clouds look pretty other-worldly to me. Plus, if your moon has a different chemistry from the planet, the clouds will look very different anyway - think about the clouds on Venus, or any of the gas giants.
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– Nathaniel
Jan 18 at 3:17
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I can't answer this in detail, but I suspect a liquid surface is ever-changing, no?
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– Mikey
Jan 18 at 15:55
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@Kapten-N Noted, but irrelevant for the question ;)
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 16:49
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Imagine an inhabitated planet like ours with a moon of the same projected size in the sky. The moon has visible structures of colors or darker and lighter areas.
Every evening when the moon gets visible in the sky, it's surface changed in at least 1/4 of the visible area. It didn't just rotate, no-one on this planet has ever seen the same image of the moon twice in their life.
How is it possible that the structure or pattern on the surface of a moon changes constantly while the planet is stable enough to support intelligent life?
Edit due to so many answers requiring an atmosphere to work: The moon can have an atmosphere, but the changing patterns must be on a planetary (or moony?) scale and look otherworldly. Simple clouds floating around are too similar to what the natives see every day on their home planet. Giant stoms like on Jupiter are ok, but they have the tendency to repeat their patterns.
science-based moons astronomy
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Imagine an inhabitated planet like ours with a moon of the same projected size in the sky. The moon has visible structures of colors or darker and lighter areas.
Every evening when the moon gets visible in the sky, it's surface changed in at least 1/4 of the visible area. It didn't just rotate, no-one on this planet has ever seen the same image of the moon twice in their life.
How is it possible that the structure or pattern on the surface of a moon changes constantly while the planet is stable enough to support intelligent life?
Edit due to so many answers requiring an atmosphere to work: The moon can have an atmosphere, but the changing patterns must be on a planetary (or moony?) scale and look otherworldly. Simple clouds floating around are too similar to what the natives see every day on their home planet. Giant stoms like on Jupiter are ok, but they have the tendency to repeat their patterns.
science-based moons astronomy
science-based moons astronomy
edited Jan 18 at 16:51
Elmy
asked Jan 17 at 17:21
ElmyElmy
11.9k22156
11.9k22156
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Related: Always a full Moon for the Emperor - Can this be achieved with solar panels and LEDs?
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– Alexander
Jan 17 at 20:56
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It's Io! Of course, you'd be hard pressed to find a moon with a lot of geological activity without also having Io's conditions. (I.e. Orbiting a gas giant and surrounded by many other moons.) Maybe if the moon somehow formed very recently?
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– Lemma Prism
Jan 17 at 22:33
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Clouds don't necessarily look the same from space as they do from the ground. If you look at images of Earth from space, the clouds look pretty other-worldly to me. Plus, if your moon has a different chemistry from the planet, the clouds will look very different anyway - think about the clouds on Venus, or any of the gas giants.
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– Nathaniel
Jan 18 at 3:17
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I can't answer this in detail, but I suspect a liquid surface is ever-changing, no?
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– Mikey
Jan 18 at 15:55
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@Kapten-N Noted, but irrelevant for the question ;)
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 16:49
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show 2 more comments
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Related: Always a full Moon for the Emperor - Can this be achieved with solar panels and LEDs?
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– Alexander
Jan 17 at 20:56
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It's Io! Of course, you'd be hard pressed to find a moon with a lot of geological activity without also having Io's conditions. (I.e. Orbiting a gas giant and surrounded by many other moons.) Maybe if the moon somehow formed very recently?
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– Lemma Prism
Jan 17 at 22:33
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Clouds don't necessarily look the same from space as they do from the ground. If you look at images of Earth from space, the clouds look pretty other-worldly to me. Plus, if your moon has a different chemistry from the planet, the clouds will look very different anyway - think about the clouds on Venus, or any of the gas giants.
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– Nathaniel
Jan 18 at 3:17
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I can't answer this in detail, but I suspect a liquid surface is ever-changing, no?
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– Mikey
Jan 18 at 15:55
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@Kapten-N Noted, but irrelevant for the question ;)
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 16:49
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Related: Always a full Moon for the Emperor - Can this be achieved with solar panels and LEDs?
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– Alexander
Jan 17 at 20:56
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Related: Always a full Moon for the Emperor - Can this be achieved with solar panels and LEDs?
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– Alexander
Jan 17 at 20:56
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It's Io! Of course, you'd be hard pressed to find a moon with a lot of geological activity without also having Io's conditions. (I.e. Orbiting a gas giant and surrounded by many other moons.) Maybe if the moon somehow formed very recently?
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– Lemma Prism
Jan 17 at 22:33
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It's Io! Of course, you'd be hard pressed to find a moon with a lot of geological activity without also having Io's conditions. (I.e. Orbiting a gas giant and surrounded by many other moons.) Maybe if the moon somehow formed very recently?
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– Lemma Prism
Jan 17 at 22:33
1
1
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Clouds don't necessarily look the same from space as they do from the ground. If you look at images of Earth from space, the clouds look pretty other-worldly to me. Plus, if your moon has a different chemistry from the planet, the clouds will look very different anyway - think about the clouds on Venus, or any of the gas giants.
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– Nathaniel
Jan 18 at 3:17
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Clouds don't necessarily look the same from space as they do from the ground. If you look at images of Earth from space, the clouds look pretty other-worldly to me. Plus, if your moon has a different chemistry from the planet, the clouds will look very different anyway - think about the clouds on Venus, or any of the gas giants.
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– Nathaniel
Jan 18 at 3:17
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I can't answer this in detail, but I suspect a liquid surface is ever-changing, no?
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– Mikey
Jan 18 at 15:55
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I can't answer this in detail, but I suspect a liquid surface is ever-changing, no?
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– Mikey
Jan 18 at 15:55
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1
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@Kapten-N Noted, but irrelevant for the question ;)
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 16:49
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@Kapten-N Noted, but irrelevant for the question ;)
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 16:49
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18 Answers
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Make the Moon Bigger
Or, more accurately, more massive. You'd have to move its orbit out a bit to prevent more brutal tides on the planet, but make it massive enough to hold an atmosphere of its own. Make that atmosphere out of denser gases, ones that can be held with a more tenuous grip than our own, and, ideally, ones that can be coloured and have interesting fluid dynamics. Dinitrogen tetroxide, maybe.
With shifting cloud patterns (doubtless very lethal but very pretty), maybe from core heating, you get a relatively rapidly shifting lunar appearance without having to make the moon out of anything implausible.
Edit: Another option - if you're already allowing for an active core for additional heating (and an extra swirly atmosphere), you could also have volcanism. Nothing like a man in the moon with acne!
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It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
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– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
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You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
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– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
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Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
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– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
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Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
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– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
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Unutterably Immense Aurora Borealis
Credit: nasa.gov -- Aurorae on Jupiter
If you don't already know, aurorae are electromagnetic spectacles caused by high-energy, solar-charged particles bombarding with an atmosphere. They come in many shapes, magnitudes, and colors. Here's how we'll construct your shape-shifting moon with them:
Multicolored Aurorae
Because you've now allowed for an atmosphere, we can actually design how our aurorae will appear. Atmospheric composition determines the color of the aurorae as those high-energy ions interact with the various gases involved. Atomic oxygen produces red, orange, or green light depending on the amount of energy it becomes excited by (generally green light at lower altitudes, more-so ruddy light at higher altitudes in Earth's specific atmosphere). At much lower altitudes, atomic oxygen (again, specific to Earth's atmosphere) becomes less common (atomic oxygen is produced when diatomic oxygen drifts into the upper stratosphere and is broken by UV radiation); nitrogen instead can be used and excited: nitrogen absorbing energy will produce blue light, while nitrogen losing energy (after having gained excess) will produce red light.
Aurorae manifest in curtains descending into the atmosphere, where atmospheric composition, descending into the atmosphere, changes as well. This results in regions where the colors mix: pink, a mixture of red and green light; and yellow, a mixture of green and red (greater intensity followed by lesser intensity).
We have a lot more colors to work with, however (keep in mind, lighter gases are likely to escape the atmosphere, so their concentrations will naturally be diminished [one should also factor in relative abundance under planetary formation conditions]): Helium, white to orange; Neon, red-orange; Argon, violet to a lavender blue; Water Vapor, dimmer pink or magenta; and Carbon Dioxide, blue-white to pink. Personally, I would select our basic, Earth-analog atmospheric concoction of Nitrogen and Oxygen, yet, with a greater proportion of Carbon Dioxide--much greater for the following reason:
Aurorae magnitude in relation to gravity, magnetosphere strength, and atmospheric mass
The magnetosphere of Earth is kind of weak. It manages to nudge only a small fraction of solar-charged particles to collide with the atmosphere. A stronger field will affect particle trajectories more, meaning more collisions with the atmosphere and more lights. Most of the particles flying off the Sun (besides neutrinos, I think) are electrons, which are negative in charge. If geomagnetic north sits at the north pole, then the aurorae will be stronger in the northern hemisphere, although, after some degree of intensity, this distinction may no longer matter as particles bombard most of the atmospheric surface pretty uniformly, in the sense of whether any particular region of atmosphere is exposed naked and non-bombarded. The south pole will attract the remaining positively-charged particles--protons and alpha particles--however, they are lesser in their abundances. Withal, the north pole would be "brighter," or more-so populated with aurorae than the south pole, however, ideally the aurorae will span the whole moon, just being brighter in those regions. Onward.
A thicker, more massive atmosphere in tandem with a weaker gravitational pull is ideal for maximal aurorae activity. The weaker gravity will extend the atmosphere further from the moon's surface. The volumes of atmosphere where the solar-charged particles may interact will be extended under weaker gravity (the atmosphere will be taller).
To complete the picture
Our atmosphere may allow an observer to see the surface. Ideally, we want our aurorae to be consistent and it turns out that solar activity itself is pretty consistent and unvarying. If the surface is ever visible through the swathes of folding, shaping, shifting, entombing, iridescent ribbons, then we must make it indistinct. A volcanic past could achieve this.
Credit: earthscienceeducation.org -- Basalt Rock
A surface largely of basaltic and obsidian-like rock could probably accomplish this.
Non-repeating patterns
Now, aurorae typically follow magnetic field lines of the magnetosphere. Magnetosphere structures vary depending on a multitude of factors, such as the distance from the sun, the intensity of solar winds, among others. Magnetic geometry is not quite that simple, however. The Aurorae we should expect shouldn't fall into predictable routines, though, just to be safe, let's just offset it from its rotational axis and center of mass and make it do other weird stuff. Also, let's assume that our inhabited world also has a magnetosphere (a safe assumption?) of different, lesser strength and perhaps offset to another angle which isn't perpendicular to the equatorial (also a safe assumption that the moon orbits near the equatorial?). The planet's and the moon's magnetospheres will mesh and interact with one another, possibly in a chaotic fashion, which will certainly help the chaotic appearance of our moon's aurorae.
Credit: youtube.com -- Interacting magnetic dipoles
In essence, we are taking advantage of the dynamic state of our planet-moon system to mesh and twist the involved electromagnetic geometry as much as possible.
Conclusion
A small moon with a relatively thick atmosphere (perhaps the atmospheric mass of Earth's) perhaps comprised of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, with a basaltic surface of supremely dark, perhaps sooty-like rock and regolith, and an immense, offset, dislodged, and powerful magnetosphere responsible for chaotic bands of aurorae across its photosphere.
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Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
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– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
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@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
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– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
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How it could work
Water example
Your planet has a (water)ice surface. When the star doesn't shine upon the surface of the moon surface temperature falls below -10 °C (there is likely no pressure on the moon). But when it does shine temperature rises above -10 °C and it melts and the surface transforms, because of gravitational pulls. Other things effecting the surface would be:
Meteor impacts, solar winds, relative position to planet and sun.
Additional effects
Meteor impacts can form large mountain waves which take for months to get molten down while still changing their shape every day. They could also cause swirls and other uneven textures over the moon surface. Although these swirls would mostly be caused by solar winds. Another thing to consider is that the relative position between planet and sun will cause the overall flow direction to change, as would meteor impacts.
Alternatives
You could also use other elements with different melting points for scenarios where temperatures always exceed -10 °C or never exceed -10 °C. Examples:
Lower than -10 °C
- oxygen -218 °C
- chlorine -101 °C
- mercury -38 °C
Higher than -10 °C
- rubidium 39 °C
- sodium 97 °C
- tin 231 °C
Now these are just examples but I hope at least one of them can come to use.
This is my source(just type in the mentioned element and compare the result)
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Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
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– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
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@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
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– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
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Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
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– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
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@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
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– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
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@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
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– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
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Naturally occurring Thermochromic chemicals.
Those of us old enough to remember the 1970s remember mood rings.
While such chemicals are unlikely as natural deposits, it is fairly easy to imagine that some flowering plants could incorporate such as a form of sexual attraction or such-like.
No earth-like plants exist without the benefit of atmosphere, but perhaps an different design of plant forms could exist in thin carbon-dioxide atmosphere that may be compatible with your story. A hard-vacuum is likely to make significant plant-like coverage impossible.
Any high-contrast vegetation that has a short lifespan would perhaps be sufficient, esp. competing forms with different reflectance characteristics.
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Take Pluto as inspiration. From the wiki (all emphasis are mine):
Pluto's surface is composed of more than 98 percent solid nitrogen, with traces of methane and carbon monoxide. The face of Pluto oriented toward Charon contains more solid methane, whereas the opposite face contains more nitrogen and solid carbon monoxide. Distribution of volatile ices is thought to be season-dependent and influenced more by solar insolation and topography than subsurface processes.
(...)
Pluto's surface color has changed between 1994 and 2003: the northern polar region has brightened and the southern hemisphere has darkened. Pluto's overall redness has also increased substantially between 2000 and 2002. These rapid changes are probably related to seasonal condensation and sublimation of portions of Pluto's atmosphere (...)
Now this may seem to conflict with one of your requirements:
The moon does not have an atmosphere
But again, according to another page in Wikipedia:
The surface pressure of the atmosphere of Pluto, measured by New Horizons in 2015, is about 1 Pa (10 μbar), roughly 100,000 times less than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
Some satellites in LEO face similar atmospheric pressures and need reboosting every then. Bottom line being: that's what objects in space around us face. So for all practical purposes Pluto's surface is exposed to a vacuum. Standing naked on it wouldn't be much different from being naked on Earth's orbit.
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The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
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– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
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I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
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– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
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Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
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– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
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@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
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– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
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@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
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– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
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Your planet is tidally locked and it's moon is made of something with a low melting point.
This means that it's eternal twilight on the narrow band of habitable terrain on your planet, and that the day is marked by the ascent of the moon, which, continually melted by the sun and frozen by the planet's shadow, changes each day.
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Oceans of nonlinear chemical oscillator compound!
Imagine that there`s an ocean on the moon that is filled to the brim with e.g. malonic acid and potassium bromate. That would yield literal chaotic color patterns floating both on its surface and all the way down to the seabed.
This is called the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction.
All weather changes, including the amount of sunlight absorbed, the surface waves, the underwater currents (well, technically it`s not water, but whatever), the winds, the evaporation, the volcanic activity — everything of the sort would add to the total randomness and uniqueness of the pattern.
Here`s a video of it oscillating in a Petri dish. And here`s another one.
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A watery body, such as Enceladus (maybe Ceres as long as it has an icy core), orbits as a moon. This moon could have a very eccentric orbit, causing tidal forced to act upon it, causing cryo-volcanism. these cryovolcanos can cover the surface with various chemicals and minerals (water, salty brine, methane, ethane, or other organics) in an ever changing pattern.
The cracking and shifting of the fragile surface would also aid in the changing surface patterns.
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The "no atmosphere" requirement makes this especially tough because it means we're limited to solid materials at the surface. Any liquid would evaporate in the near-perfect vacuum, and any appreciable amount of gas would be, well, an atmosphere.
You say the moon hasn't rotated, so that leads me to assume it is tidally locked. My suggestion would be a very slow cyclical chemical reaction which occurs in the moon's crust at the surface, similar to the iodine clock reaction. I'm imagining bands of light or color slowly propagating across the surface of the moon, sort of like the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, taking a few hours to travel the full diameter of the moon's disc. This reaction could be catalyzed by the sunlight hitting the surface of the moon as it faces away from the planet, then continue through the moon's "night", where it is visible from the surface of the parent planet.
This setup could make the moon potentially livable (not a volcanic mess like Io) while avoiding any surface liquids or gases.
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Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
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Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
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– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
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No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
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– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
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Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
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– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
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That solar system could be experiencing a phenomenon like the late heavy bombardment: the moon is constantly hit by meteorites, so that it is continuously shaped by these impacts.
The problem is that these meteorites must be very frequent (say in the order of the dozen of impacts in a day), but quite small - in the range of 10-20 meters - in order not to cause damage when they fall onto the main planet, burning in its atmosphere. In this case probably you should somehow justify the lack of bigger asteroids.
You could also point that the moon is of recent formation (maybe captured by the gravity of the planet), which implies its core is still active and gives origin to some vulcanic activity that shapes its surface (but in this case the changes would be slower and the surface of the moon wouldn't change a lot in the span of some days).
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Possibly there could be intelligence of some sort on the moon and their activities can make a big visual change in the appearance of large sections of the moon during short periods.
Possibly they are artists trying out various "paint" patterns to see which make the moon look best.
Perhaps they move countless millions of large vehicles of various colors around on the moon, arranging them in various patterns as part of some sort of "dance".
Maybe they are trying to send a message to the natives of the planet and thus making an ever changing series of patterns on the moon.
A century or so ago an astronomer believed that some tiny changes of color he observed on the moon were the results of vast hordes of insects moving around.
So possibly on your moon thick areas of vegetation spring up, changing the color of vast regions, and then vast wandering hordes of insects travel toward them, changing the face of the moon as they move. When the insects arrive at the forest or meadow or swamp their color mingles with the color of the plants and changes the color of the region as seen from the planet.
So the insects eat all the vegetation in the region, changing its color, and leave their wastes (containing many seeds) behind to fertilize the soil. The insects move on, searching for another area of vegetation, and the area is now a different color, barren of vegetation until the seeds sprout and start to grow. Eventually the plants become thick enough to change the color of the region back to vegetation colored, then the region retains that color until the same or a different horde of insects arrives to eat the vegetation.
Of course it seem rather doubtful that a planet small enough to be habitable would have a moon large enough to be habitable for at least some types of life. That would make them seem a lot more like a double planet than like a planet and its moon.
Of course the intelligent beings on the moon don't have to be living beings; they could be machines.
Or the two worlds could both be habitable planets orbiting their star if their orbits are a lot closer to each other than any planetary orbits in our solar system, so that when the planets pass closest to each other the natives of one can see surface features on the other. There is actually a known solar system where planets in the habitable zone of their star do sometimes orbit close enough for someone on one of them to see surface features on the other - TRAPPIST-1.
The distance between the orbits of TRAPPIST-1b and TRAPPIST-1c is only 1.6 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon. The planets should appear prominently in each other's skies, in some cases appearing several times larger than the Moon appears from Earth.[41] A year on the closest planet passes in only 1.5 Earth days, while the seventh planet's year passes in only 18.8 days.[38][34]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRAPPIST-11
Or maybe the "planet" and "moon" are actually both moons that orbit a gas giant planet.
Your "planet" could actually be a giant, Earth sized habitable moon, and the "moon" would orbit closer to the gas giant. Sometimes your "planet" and the inner moon would be almost on opposite sides of the gas giant and the inner moon wouldn't look big enough for details to be visible. But at intervals, probably every few days, the inner moon would pass close to the outer habitable moon and the natives of the habitable moon could see details of the surface of the inner moon and note the changes (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star) .
If the inner moon orbits close enough to the gas giant the tidal heating should make the inner moon hyper volcanic like Io, the innermost Galilean moon of Jupiter. Various volcanoes might erupt often, spewing out vast amounts of lava of various colors to constantly resurface the inner moon. So each time that details of the inner moon were visible the surface patterns would be at least slightly different.
The problem with this is that the clouds and weather patterns on the gas giant planet would be visible all the time and would also change, thus possibly distracting the natives of the habitable moon from the show on the inner moon.
Possibly the moon in your story could suffer from tidal heating and constant resurfacing if it orbited a habitable planet in the right way. It would probably have to have an eccentric orbit which made it get noticeably farther and closer to the planet at various points in its orbit, and thus the patterns on its surface would only be visible when the moon was closer to the planet (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star).
Possibly someone here can calculate if it is possible for a habitable planet to have a presumably recently captured moon with enough tidal heating to be constantly resurfacing itself.
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An alien race has covered the planet, or whatever percentage you see fit with a giant TV screen.
Maybe they double as solar panels somehow.
Now they can literally change any part of the visible surface at whim.
Just wait till they spam you with moon sized commericials... muhhahahahaha!
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1
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worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
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– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
1
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I'll just leave this here...
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– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
add a comment |
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Long ago an intelligent species found this moon and made plans to inhabit it. They created a network of tunnels all across the planet just below its surface. They planted the seeds of life and prepared to begin settling, but for some reason, they never did. So the moon was left, carved tunnels beneath its surface with the beginnings of life sprouting.
Fast forward a few thousand years to today, and the moon is buzzing with life--but that life all lives underground. A specific creature, the Mitter, has thrived on the underground flora and fauna. They are a fast moving species that is nomadic by nature, constantly moving to different places in different patterns every day.
However, when they move, they let off an abundance of benign chemicals that rise to the surface. These chemicals glow when in contact with the outside air--glowing a slightly different hue for each Mitter. With the abundance of the creatures and their unusual travel patterns, the planet appears to glow in ever changing shades and hues. Perhaps the Mitters' chemicals glow different colors depending on the time of season so the moon will go through phases of colors throughout the year?
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Here are some ideas, for a moon with a solid face:
- It could have really active plate tectonics moving the surface features around, which (as I understand it) would also imply a strong magnetic field and lots of volcanic activity.
- It could be very large, and the orbit of your planet could be just near-enough to an asteroid belt that whenever the moon moves toward the outer side of the orbit, it pulls asteroids into itself, actively rearranging the craters on its face
- If your planet is large, its moon could have a ring small of meteors around it, regularly falling into the moon (with no atmosphere to destroy them) and those could also rearrange the craters.
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Arctic sea ice is constantly changing, although not on a daily timescale:
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BothDismalEmperorpenguin.webp
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The surface of the moon is covered in an exotic lifeform with an exceedingly rapid lifecycle. Colonies of this lifeform grow to cover large portions of the lunar surface in as little as 12 hours, competing for space with surrounding colonies, before rapidly crashing as soil fertility is depleted. No sooner has one colony collapsed, than another has begun its growth on another part of the moon's surface.
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Wildly unstable plate-tectonics resulting in constant quakes and volcanic eruptions. There's always lava flowing somewhere, ash floating somewhere, and new rocks forming someplace else.
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There's the obvious option:
That's no moon. It's a space station.
There are many options what is its purpose then. It could be a hyperspace relay, where the surface features are related to how hyperspace works, and massive changes are result of tuning to different targets locations or "hyperspace weather" or whatnot.
It could be a fully automated data network relay, and it's that big because hyperspace relay just needs the size to open the rift to the hyperspace.
It could actually be travel relay, so it has to be big enough to fit the ships that travel through it. And the ships come in and exit inside the sphere. It could have a port for exiting, but nobody really cares to exit here. Or this system could be a protection zone for the natives, and nobody is allowed to show themselves. That could also explain why there maybe was extra effort to disguise the relay as a moon.
The relay could also be ancient, the aliens long gone (moved to better technologies, died out, transcended, whatever). Now the relay just sits there, adapting its surface to hyperspace changes, automated repair systems keeping it functional, potentially for as long as the star of the system keeps pumping energy out.
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Make the Moon Bigger
Or, more accurately, more massive. You'd have to move its orbit out a bit to prevent more brutal tides on the planet, but make it massive enough to hold an atmosphere of its own. Make that atmosphere out of denser gases, ones that can be held with a more tenuous grip than our own, and, ideally, ones that can be coloured and have interesting fluid dynamics. Dinitrogen tetroxide, maybe.
With shifting cloud patterns (doubtless very lethal but very pretty), maybe from core heating, you get a relatively rapidly shifting lunar appearance without having to make the moon out of anything implausible.
Edit: Another option - if you're already allowing for an active core for additional heating (and an extra swirly atmosphere), you could also have volcanism. Nothing like a man in the moon with acne!
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It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
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– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
$begingroup$
You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
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– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
$begingroup$
Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
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– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
$begingroup$
Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
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– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Make the Moon Bigger
Or, more accurately, more massive. You'd have to move its orbit out a bit to prevent more brutal tides on the planet, but make it massive enough to hold an atmosphere of its own. Make that atmosphere out of denser gases, ones that can be held with a more tenuous grip than our own, and, ideally, ones that can be coloured and have interesting fluid dynamics. Dinitrogen tetroxide, maybe.
With shifting cloud patterns (doubtless very lethal but very pretty), maybe from core heating, you get a relatively rapidly shifting lunar appearance without having to make the moon out of anything implausible.
Edit: Another option - if you're already allowing for an active core for additional heating (and an extra swirly atmosphere), you could also have volcanism. Nothing like a man in the moon with acne!
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
$begingroup$
You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
$endgroup$
– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
$begingroup$
Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
$begingroup$
Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Make the Moon Bigger
Or, more accurately, more massive. You'd have to move its orbit out a bit to prevent more brutal tides on the planet, but make it massive enough to hold an atmosphere of its own. Make that atmosphere out of denser gases, ones that can be held with a more tenuous grip than our own, and, ideally, ones that can be coloured and have interesting fluid dynamics. Dinitrogen tetroxide, maybe.
With shifting cloud patterns (doubtless very lethal but very pretty), maybe from core heating, you get a relatively rapidly shifting lunar appearance without having to make the moon out of anything implausible.
Edit: Another option - if you're already allowing for an active core for additional heating (and an extra swirly atmosphere), you could also have volcanism. Nothing like a man in the moon with acne!
$endgroup$
Make the Moon Bigger
Or, more accurately, more massive. You'd have to move its orbit out a bit to prevent more brutal tides on the planet, but make it massive enough to hold an atmosphere of its own. Make that atmosphere out of denser gases, ones that can be held with a more tenuous grip than our own, and, ideally, ones that can be coloured and have interesting fluid dynamics. Dinitrogen tetroxide, maybe.
With shifting cloud patterns (doubtless very lethal but very pretty), maybe from core heating, you get a relatively rapidly shifting lunar appearance without having to make the moon out of anything implausible.
Edit: Another option - if you're already allowing for an active core for additional heating (and an extra swirly atmosphere), you could also have volcanism. Nothing like a man in the moon with acne!
edited Jan 17 at 18:31
answered Jan 17 at 18:19
jdunlopjdunlop
7,88511845
7,88511845
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It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
$begingroup$
You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
$endgroup$
– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
$begingroup$
Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
$begingroup$
Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
$begingroup$
You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
$endgroup$
– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
$begingroup$
Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
$begingroup$
Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
$begingroup$
It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
$begingroup$
It has to be big enough to hold an atmosphere otherwise it will have frozen to death long ago. You can't have geological activity on a body without an atmosphere that isn't being tidally heated - and live on it (can't live on Io) +1
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 17 at 19:00
$begingroup$
You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
$endgroup$
– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
$begingroup$
You're not required to live on it; the OP's specs are just that it have a changing face. Definitely wouldn't want to live on Titan, either!
$endgroup$
– jdunlop
Jan 17 at 20:05
$begingroup$
Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
$begingroup$
Check out Jupiter's swirly atmosphere! cnn.com/2018/01/08/weather/jupiter-nasa-photos-juno-trnd/…
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 17 at 20:16
$begingroup$
Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
$begingroup$
Wouldn't these acne volcanoes create regular patterns in the cloudscape? Would the atmosphere tend towards regular bands and belts, i.e., along the equatorial in prominent jet streams?
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 19 at 13:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Unutterably Immense Aurora Borealis
Credit: nasa.gov -- Aurorae on Jupiter
If you don't already know, aurorae are electromagnetic spectacles caused by high-energy, solar-charged particles bombarding with an atmosphere. They come in many shapes, magnitudes, and colors. Here's how we'll construct your shape-shifting moon with them:
Multicolored Aurorae
Because you've now allowed for an atmosphere, we can actually design how our aurorae will appear. Atmospheric composition determines the color of the aurorae as those high-energy ions interact with the various gases involved. Atomic oxygen produces red, orange, or green light depending on the amount of energy it becomes excited by (generally green light at lower altitudes, more-so ruddy light at higher altitudes in Earth's specific atmosphere). At much lower altitudes, atomic oxygen (again, specific to Earth's atmosphere) becomes less common (atomic oxygen is produced when diatomic oxygen drifts into the upper stratosphere and is broken by UV radiation); nitrogen instead can be used and excited: nitrogen absorbing energy will produce blue light, while nitrogen losing energy (after having gained excess) will produce red light.
Aurorae manifest in curtains descending into the atmosphere, where atmospheric composition, descending into the atmosphere, changes as well. This results in regions where the colors mix: pink, a mixture of red and green light; and yellow, a mixture of green and red (greater intensity followed by lesser intensity).
We have a lot more colors to work with, however (keep in mind, lighter gases are likely to escape the atmosphere, so their concentrations will naturally be diminished [one should also factor in relative abundance under planetary formation conditions]): Helium, white to orange; Neon, red-orange; Argon, violet to a lavender blue; Water Vapor, dimmer pink or magenta; and Carbon Dioxide, blue-white to pink. Personally, I would select our basic, Earth-analog atmospheric concoction of Nitrogen and Oxygen, yet, with a greater proportion of Carbon Dioxide--much greater for the following reason:
Aurorae magnitude in relation to gravity, magnetosphere strength, and atmospheric mass
The magnetosphere of Earth is kind of weak. It manages to nudge only a small fraction of solar-charged particles to collide with the atmosphere. A stronger field will affect particle trajectories more, meaning more collisions with the atmosphere and more lights. Most of the particles flying off the Sun (besides neutrinos, I think) are electrons, which are negative in charge. If geomagnetic north sits at the north pole, then the aurorae will be stronger in the northern hemisphere, although, after some degree of intensity, this distinction may no longer matter as particles bombard most of the atmospheric surface pretty uniformly, in the sense of whether any particular region of atmosphere is exposed naked and non-bombarded. The south pole will attract the remaining positively-charged particles--protons and alpha particles--however, they are lesser in their abundances. Withal, the north pole would be "brighter," or more-so populated with aurorae than the south pole, however, ideally the aurorae will span the whole moon, just being brighter in those regions. Onward.
A thicker, more massive atmosphere in tandem with a weaker gravitational pull is ideal for maximal aurorae activity. The weaker gravity will extend the atmosphere further from the moon's surface. The volumes of atmosphere where the solar-charged particles may interact will be extended under weaker gravity (the atmosphere will be taller).
To complete the picture
Our atmosphere may allow an observer to see the surface. Ideally, we want our aurorae to be consistent and it turns out that solar activity itself is pretty consistent and unvarying. If the surface is ever visible through the swathes of folding, shaping, shifting, entombing, iridescent ribbons, then we must make it indistinct. A volcanic past could achieve this.
Credit: earthscienceeducation.org -- Basalt Rock
A surface largely of basaltic and obsidian-like rock could probably accomplish this.
Non-repeating patterns
Now, aurorae typically follow magnetic field lines of the magnetosphere. Magnetosphere structures vary depending on a multitude of factors, such as the distance from the sun, the intensity of solar winds, among others. Magnetic geometry is not quite that simple, however. The Aurorae we should expect shouldn't fall into predictable routines, though, just to be safe, let's just offset it from its rotational axis and center of mass and make it do other weird stuff. Also, let's assume that our inhabited world also has a magnetosphere (a safe assumption?) of different, lesser strength and perhaps offset to another angle which isn't perpendicular to the equatorial (also a safe assumption that the moon orbits near the equatorial?). The planet's and the moon's magnetospheres will mesh and interact with one another, possibly in a chaotic fashion, which will certainly help the chaotic appearance of our moon's aurorae.
Credit: youtube.com -- Interacting magnetic dipoles
In essence, we are taking advantage of the dynamic state of our planet-moon system to mesh and twist the involved electromagnetic geometry as much as possible.
Conclusion
A small moon with a relatively thick atmosphere (perhaps the atmospheric mass of Earth's) perhaps comprised of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, with a basaltic surface of supremely dark, perhaps sooty-like rock and regolith, and an immense, offset, dislodged, and powerful magnetosphere responsible for chaotic bands of aurorae across its photosphere.
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Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
$begingroup$
@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Unutterably Immense Aurora Borealis
Credit: nasa.gov -- Aurorae on Jupiter
If you don't already know, aurorae are electromagnetic spectacles caused by high-energy, solar-charged particles bombarding with an atmosphere. They come in many shapes, magnitudes, and colors. Here's how we'll construct your shape-shifting moon with them:
Multicolored Aurorae
Because you've now allowed for an atmosphere, we can actually design how our aurorae will appear. Atmospheric composition determines the color of the aurorae as those high-energy ions interact with the various gases involved. Atomic oxygen produces red, orange, or green light depending on the amount of energy it becomes excited by (generally green light at lower altitudes, more-so ruddy light at higher altitudes in Earth's specific atmosphere). At much lower altitudes, atomic oxygen (again, specific to Earth's atmosphere) becomes less common (atomic oxygen is produced when diatomic oxygen drifts into the upper stratosphere and is broken by UV radiation); nitrogen instead can be used and excited: nitrogen absorbing energy will produce blue light, while nitrogen losing energy (after having gained excess) will produce red light.
Aurorae manifest in curtains descending into the atmosphere, where atmospheric composition, descending into the atmosphere, changes as well. This results in regions where the colors mix: pink, a mixture of red and green light; and yellow, a mixture of green and red (greater intensity followed by lesser intensity).
We have a lot more colors to work with, however (keep in mind, lighter gases are likely to escape the atmosphere, so their concentrations will naturally be diminished [one should also factor in relative abundance under planetary formation conditions]): Helium, white to orange; Neon, red-orange; Argon, violet to a lavender blue; Water Vapor, dimmer pink or magenta; and Carbon Dioxide, blue-white to pink. Personally, I would select our basic, Earth-analog atmospheric concoction of Nitrogen and Oxygen, yet, with a greater proportion of Carbon Dioxide--much greater for the following reason:
Aurorae magnitude in relation to gravity, magnetosphere strength, and atmospheric mass
The magnetosphere of Earth is kind of weak. It manages to nudge only a small fraction of solar-charged particles to collide with the atmosphere. A stronger field will affect particle trajectories more, meaning more collisions with the atmosphere and more lights. Most of the particles flying off the Sun (besides neutrinos, I think) are electrons, which are negative in charge. If geomagnetic north sits at the north pole, then the aurorae will be stronger in the northern hemisphere, although, after some degree of intensity, this distinction may no longer matter as particles bombard most of the atmospheric surface pretty uniformly, in the sense of whether any particular region of atmosphere is exposed naked and non-bombarded. The south pole will attract the remaining positively-charged particles--protons and alpha particles--however, they are lesser in their abundances. Withal, the north pole would be "brighter," or more-so populated with aurorae than the south pole, however, ideally the aurorae will span the whole moon, just being brighter in those regions. Onward.
A thicker, more massive atmosphere in tandem with a weaker gravitational pull is ideal for maximal aurorae activity. The weaker gravity will extend the atmosphere further from the moon's surface. The volumes of atmosphere where the solar-charged particles may interact will be extended under weaker gravity (the atmosphere will be taller).
To complete the picture
Our atmosphere may allow an observer to see the surface. Ideally, we want our aurorae to be consistent and it turns out that solar activity itself is pretty consistent and unvarying. If the surface is ever visible through the swathes of folding, shaping, shifting, entombing, iridescent ribbons, then we must make it indistinct. A volcanic past could achieve this.
Credit: earthscienceeducation.org -- Basalt Rock
A surface largely of basaltic and obsidian-like rock could probably accomplish this.
Non-repeating patterns
Now, aurorae typically follow magnetic field lines of the magnetosphere. Magnetosphere structures vary depending on a multitude of factors, such as the distance from the sun, the intensity of solar winds, among others. Magnetic geometry is not quite that simple, however. The Aurorae we should expect shouldn't fall into predictable routines, though, just to be safe, let's just offset it from its rotational axis and center of mass and make it do other weird stuff. Also, let's assume that our inhabited world also has a magnetosphere (a safe assumption?) of different, lesser strength and perhaps offset to another angle which isn't perpendicular to the equatorial (also a safe assumption that the moon orbits near the equatorial?). The planet's and the moon's magnetospheres will mesh and interact with one another, possibly in a chaotic fashion, which will certainly help the chaotic appearance of our moon's aurorae.
Credit: youtube.com -- Interacting magnetic dipoles
In essence, we are taking advantage of the dynamic state of our planet-moon system to mesh and twist the involved electromagnetic geometry as much as possible.
Conclusion
A small moon with a relatively thick atmosphere (perhaps the atmospheric mass of Earth's) perhaps comprised of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, with a basaltic surface of supremely dark, perhaps sooty-like rock and regolith, and an immense, offset, dislodged, and powerful magnetosphere responsible for chaotic bands of aurorae across its photosphere.
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Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
$begingroup$
@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Unutterably Immense Aurora Borealis
Credit: nasa.gov -- Aurorae on Jupiter
If you don't already know, aurorae are electromagnetic spectacles caused by high-energy, solar-charged particles bombarding with an atmosphere. They come in many shapes, magnitudes, and colors. Here's how we'll construct your shape-shifting moon with them:
Multicolored Aurorae
Because you've now allowed for an atmosphere, we can actually design how our aurorae will appear. Atmospheric composition determines the color of the aurorae as those high-energy ions interact with the various gases involved. Atomic oxygen produces red, orange, or green light depending on the amount of energy it becomes excited by (generally green light at lower altitudes, more-so ruddy light at higher altitudes in Earth's specific atmosphere). At much lower altitudes, atomic oxygen (again, specific to Earth's atmosphere) becomes less common (atomic oxygen is produced when diatomic oxygen drifts into the upper stratosphere and is broken by UV radiation); nitrogen instead can be used and excited: nitrogen absorbing energy will produce blue light, while nitrogen losing energy (after having gained excess) will produce red light.
Aurorae manifest in curtains descending into the atmosphere, where atmospheric composition, descending into the atmosphere, changes as well. This results in regions where the colors mix: pink, a mixture of red and green light; and yellow, a mixture of green and red (greater intensity followed by lesser intensity).
We have a lot more colors to work with, however (keep in mind, lighter gases are likely to escape the atmosphere, so their concentrations will naturally be diminished [one should also factor in relative abundance under planetary formation conditions]): Helium, white to orange; Neon, red-orange; Argon, violet to a lavender blue; Water Vapor, dimmer pink or magenta; and Carbon Dioxide, blue-white to pink. Personally, I would select our basic, Earth-analog atmospheric concoction of Nitrogen and Oxygen, yet, with a greater proportion of Carbon Dioxide--much greater for the following reason:
Aurorae magnitude in relation to gravity, magnetosphere strength, and atmospheric mass
The magnetosphere of Earth is kind of weak. It manages to nudge only a small fraction of solar-charged particles to collide with the atmosphere. A stronger field will affect particle trajectories more, meaning more collisions with the atmosphere and more lights. Most of the particles flying off the Sun (besides neutrinos, I think) are electrons, which are negative in charge. If geomagnetic north sits at the north pole, then the aurorae will be stronger in the northern hemisphere, although, after some degree of intensity, this distinction may no longer matter as particles bombard most of the atmospheric surface pretty uniformly, in the sense of whether any particular region of atmosphere is exposed naked and non-bombarded. The south pole will attract the remaining positively-charged particles--protons and alpha particles--however, they are lesser in their abundances. Withal, the north pole would be "brighter," or more-so populated with aurorae than the south pole, however, ideally the aurorae will span the whole moon, just being brighter in those regions. Onward.
A thicker, more massive atmosphere in tandem with a weaker gravitational pull is ideal for maximal aurorae activity. The weaker gravity will extend the atmosphere further from the moon's surface. The volumes of atmosphere where the solar-charged particles may interact will be extended under weaker gravity (the atmosphere will be taller).
To complete the picture
Our atmosphere may allow an observer to see the surface. Ideally, we want our aurorae to be consistent and it turns out that solar activity itself is pretty consistent and unvarying. If the surface is ever visible through the swathes of folding, shaping, shifting, entombing, iridescent ribbons, then we must make it indistinct. A volcanic past could achieve this.
Credit: earthscienceeducation.org -- Basalt Rock
A surface largely of basaltic and obsidian-like rock could probably accomplish this.
Non-repeating patterns
Now, aurorae typically follow magnetic field lines of the magnetosphere. Magnetosphere structures vary depending on a multitude of factors, such as the distance from the sun, the intensity of solar winds, among others. Magnetic geometry is not quite that simple, however. The Aurorae we should expect shouldn't fall into predictable routines, though, just to be safe, let's just offset it from its rotational axis and center of mass and make it do other weird stuff. Also, let's assume that our inhabited world also has a magnetosphere (a safe assumption?) of different, lesser strength and perhaps offset to another angle which isn't perpendicular to the equatorial (also a safe assumption that the moon orbits near the equatorial?). The planet's and the moon's magnetospheres will mesh and interact with one another, possibly in a chaotic fashion, which will certainly help the chaotic appearance of our moon's aurorae.
Credit: youtube.com -- Interacting magnetic dipoles
In essence, we are taking advantage of the dynamic state of our planet-moon system to mesh and twist the involved electromagnetic geometry as much as possible.
Conclusion
A small moon with a relatively thick atmosphere (perhaps the atmospheric mass of Earth's) perhaps comprised of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, with a basaltic surface of supremely dark, perhaps sooty-like rock and regolith, and an immense, offset, dislodged, and powerful magnetosphere responsible for chaotic bands of aurorae across its photosphere.
$endgroup$
Unutterably Immense Aurora Borealis
Credit: nasa.gov -- Aurorae on Jupiter
If you don't already know, aurorae are electromagnetic spectacles caused by high-energy, solar-charged particles bombarding with an atmosphere. They come in many shapes, magnitudes, and colors. Here's how we'll construct your shape-shifting moon with them:
Multicolored Aurorae
Because you've now allowed for an atmosphere, we can actually design how our aurorae will appear. Atmospheric composition determines the color of the aurorae as those high-energy ions interact with the various gases involved. Atomic oxygen produces red, orange, or green light depending on the amount of energy it becomes excited by (generally green light at lower altitudes, more-so ruddy light at higher altitudes in Earth's specific atmosphere). At much lower altitudes, atomic oxygen (again, specific to Earth's atmosphere) becomes less common (atomic oxygen is produced when diatomic oxygen drifts into the upper stratosphere and is broken by UV radiation); nitrogen instead can be used and excited: nitrogen absorbing energy will produce blue light, while nitrogen losing energy (after having gained excess) will produce red light.
Aurorae manifest in curtains descending into the atmosphere, where atmospheric composition, descending into the atmosphere, changes as well. This results in regions where the colors mix: pink, a mixture of red and green light; and yellow, a mixture of green and red (greater intensity followed by lesser intensity).
We have a lot more colors to work with, however (keep in mind, lighter gases are likely to escape the atmosphere, so their concentrations will naturally be diminished [one should also factor in relative abundance under planetary formation conditions]): Helium, white to orange; Neon, red-orange; Argon, violet to a lavender blue; Water Vapor, dimmer pink or magenta; and Carbon Dioxide, blue-white to pink. Personally, I would select our basic, Earth-analog atmospheric concoction of Nitrogen and Oxygen, yet, with a greater proportion of Carbon Dioxide--much greater for the following reason:
Aurorae magnitude in relation to gravity, magnetosphere strength, and atmospheric mass
The magnetosphere of Earth is kind of weak. It manages to nudge only a small fraction of solar-charged particles to collide with the atmosphere. A stronger field will affect particle trajectories more, meaning more collisions with the atmosphere and more lights. Most of the particles flying off the Sun (besides neutrinos, I think) are electrons, which are negative in charge. If geomagnetic north sits at the north pole, then the aurorae will be stronger in the northern hemisphere, although, after some degree of intensity, this distinction may no longer matter as particles bombard most of the atmospheric surface pretty uniformly, in the sense of whether any particular region of atmosphere is exposed naked and non-bombarded. The south pole will attract the remaining positively-charged particles--protons and alpha particles--however, they are lesser in their abundances. Withal, the north pole would be "brighter," or more-so populated with aurorae than the south pole, however, ideally the aurorae will span the whole moon, just being brighter in those regions. Onward.
A thicker, more massive atmosphere in tandem with a weaker gravitational pull is ideal for maximal aurorae activity. The weaker gravity will extend the atmosphere further from the moon's surface. The volumes of atmosphere where the solar-charged particles may interact will be extended under weaker gravity (the atmosphere will be taller).
To complete the picture
Our atmosphere may allow an observer to see the surface. Ideally, we want our aurorae to be consistent and it turns out that solar activity itself is pretty consistent and unvarying. If the surface is ever visible through the swathes of folding, shaping, shifting, entombing, iridescent ribbons, then we must make it indistinct. A volcanic past could achieve this.
Credit: earthscienceeducation.org -- Basalt Rock
A surface largely of basaltic and obsidian-like rock could probably accomplish this.
Non-repeating patterns
Now, aurorae typically follow magnetic field lines of the magnetosphere. Magnetosphere structures vary depending on a multitude of factors, such as the distance from the sun, the intensity of solar winds, among others. Magnetic geometry is not quite that simple, however. The Aurorae we should expect shouldn't fall into predictable routines, though, just to be safe, let's just offset it from its rotational axis and center of mass and make it do other weird stuff. Also, let's assume that our inhabited world also has a magnetosphere (a safe assumption?) of different, lesser strength and perhaps offset to another angle which isn't perpendicular to the equatorial (also a safe assumption that the moon orbits near the equatorial?). The planet's and the moon's magnetospheres will mesh and interact with one another, possibly in a chaotic fashion, which will certainly help the chaotic appearance of our moon's aurorae.
Credit: youtube.com -- Interacting magnetic dipoles
In essence, we are taking advantage of the dynamic state of our planet-moon system to mesh and twist the involved electromagnetic geometry as much as possible.
Conclusion
A small moon with a relatively thick atmosphere (perhaps the atmospheric mass of Earth's) perhaps comprised of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, with a basaltic surface of supremely dark, perhaps sooty-like rock and regolith, and an immense, offset, dislodged, and powerful magnetosphere responsible for chaotic bands of aurorae across its photosphere.
edited Jan 18 at 0:08
answered Jan 17 at 20:31
B.foxB.fox
1,1471317
1,1471317
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Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
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– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
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@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
$begingroup$
@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, it sounds really interesting. Please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:25
$begingroup$
@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
$begingroup$
@Elmy Oh! This'll surely make things a lot more interesting!
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 17 at 22:04
add a comment |
$begingroup$
How it could work
Water example
Your planet has a (water)ice surface. When the star doesn't shine upon the surface of the moon surface temperature falls below -10 °C (there is likely no pressure on the moon). But when it does shine temperature rises above -10 °C and it melts and the surface transforms, because of gravitational pulls. Other things effecting the surface would be:
Meteor impacts, solar winds, relative position to planet and sun.
Additional effects
Meteor impacts can form large mountain waves which take for months to get molten down while still changing their shape every day. They could also cause swirls and other uneven textures over the moon surface. Although these swirls would mostly be caused by solar winds. Another thing to consider is that the relative position between planet and sun will cause the overall flow direction to change, as would meteor impacts.
Alternatives
You could also use other elements with different melting points for scenarios where temperatures always exceed -10 °C or never exceed -10 °C. Examples:
Lower than -10 °C
- oxygen -218 °C
- chlorine -101 °C
- mercury -38 °C
Higher than -10 °C
- rubidium 39 °C
- sodium 97 °C
- tin 231 °C
Now these are just examples but I hope at least one of them can come to use.
This is my source(just type in the mentioned element and compare the result)
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3
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Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
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– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
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@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
1
$begingroup$
Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
$begingroup$
@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
$begingroup$
@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
add a comment |
$begingroup$
How it could work
Water example
Your planet has a (water)ice surface. When the star doesn't shine upon the surface of the moon surface temperature falls below -10 °C (there is likely no pressure on the moon). But when it does shine temperature rises above -10 °C and it melts and the surface transforms, because of gravitational pulls. Other things effecting the surface would be:
Meteor impacts, solar winds, relative position to planet and sun.
Additional effects
Meteor impacts can form large mountain waves which take for months to get molten down while still changing their shape every day. They could also cause swirls and other uneven textures over the moon surface. Although these swirls would mostly be caused by solar winds. Another thing to consider is that the relative position between planet and sun will cause the overall flow direction to change, as would meteor impacts.
Alternatives
You could also use other elements with different melting points for scenarios where temperatures always exceed -10 °C or never exceed -10 °C. Examples:
Lower than -10 °C
- oxygen -218 °C
- chlorine -101 °C
- mercury -38 °C
Higher than -10 °C
- rubidium 39 °C
- sodium 97 °C
- tin 231 °C
Now these are just examples but I hope at least one of them can come to use.
This is my source(just type in the mentioned element and compare the result)
$endgroup$
3
$begingroup$
Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
$begingroup$
@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
1
$begingroup$
Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
$begingroup$
@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
$begingroup$
@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
add a comment |
$begingroup$
How it could work
Water example
Your planet has a (water)ice surface. When the star doesn't shine upon the surface of the moon surface temperature falls below -10 °C (there is likely no pressure on the moon). But when it does shine temperature rises above -10 °C and it melts and the surface transforms, because of gravitational pulls. Other things effecting the surface would be:
Meteor impacts, solar winds, relative position to planet and sun.
Additional effects
Meteor impacts can form large mountain waves which take for months to get molten down while still changing their shape every day. They could also cause swirls and other uneven textures over the moon surface. Although these swirls would mostly be caused by solar winds. Another thing to consider is that the relative position between planet and sun will cause the overall flow direction to change, as would meteor impacts.
Alternatives
You could also use other elements with different melting points for scenarios where temperatures always exceed -10 °C or never exceed -10 °C. Examples:
Lower than -10 °C
- oxygen -218 °C
- chlorine -101 °C
- mercury -38 °C
Higher than -10 °C
- rubidium 39 °C
- sodium 97 °C
- tin 231 °C
Now these are just examples but I hope at least one of them can come to use.
This is my source(just type in the mentioned element and compare the result)
$endgroup$
How it could work
Water example
Your planet has a (water)ice surface. When the star doesn't shine upon the surface of the moon surface temperature falls below -10 °C (there is likely no pressure on the moon). But when it does shine temperature rises above -10 °C and it melts and the surface transforms, because of gravitational pulls. Other things effecting the surface would be:
Meteor impacts, solar winds, relative position to planet and sun.
Additional effects
Meteor impacts can form large mountain waves which take for months to get molten down while still changing their shape every day. They could also cause swirls and other uneven textures over the moon surface. Although these swirls would mostly be caused by solar winds. Another thing to consider is that the relative position between planet and sun will cause the overall flow direction to change, as would meteor impacts.
Alternatives
You could also use other elements with different melting points for scenarios where temperatures always exceed -10 °C or never exceed -10 °C. Examples:
Lower than -10 °C
- oxygen -218 °C
- chlorine -101 °C
- mercury -38 °C
Higher than -10 °C
- rubidium 39 °C
- sodium 97 °C
- tin 231 °C
Now these are just examples but I hope at least one of them can come to use.
This is my source(just type in the mentioned element and compare the result)
edited Jan 17 at 23:51
answered Jan 17 at 18:10
SoanSoan
2,732422
2,732422
3
$begingroup$
Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
$begingroup$
@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
1
$begingroup$
Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
$begingroup$
@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
$begingroup$
@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
add a comment |
3
$begingroup$
Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
$begingroup$
@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
1
$begingroup$
Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
$begingroup$
@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
$begingroup$
@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
3
3
$begingroup$
Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
$begingroup$
Not sure this will get what the OP wants. Melting and refreezing will almost certainly occur in the same places each day. It might change a bit from season to season, but each day will look pretty much like yesterday and each season will look pretty much the same as the same season last year. Definitely not the 1/4 of it is completely different from yesterday every day.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 17 at 19:46
$begingroup$
@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
$begingroup$
@Shufflepants that's not the case because solar winds and other factors hugely effect the flow of molten substances. Other factors are impacts of meteors, current position in the orbit relative to the planet and the sun.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 17 at 23:43
1
1
$begingroup$
Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
$begingroup$
Reshaping a celestial body's surface requires a lot of energy in and of itself; solar winds are nearly intangible and will likely not fuel such processes--consider the interplanetary medium. Ices in a vacuum and exposed to hard sunlight will convert to a gas and eventually form an atmosphere. The sheer energy required to alter a landscape continuously is astronomically great.
$endgroup$
– B.fox
Jan 18 at 0:32
$begingroup$
@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
$begingroup$
@B.fox The solar winds would probably still cause different flow directions and other imperfections on the molten part of the moon surface. And of course they wouldn't be on the same level as a meteor impact.
$endgroup$
– Soan
Jan 18 at 6:02
$begingroup$
@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
$begingroup$
@Soan As B.Fox said, the energies involved with solar wind are super tiny. Yes, they will have an effect, but not a macroscopic one. If they were capable of the kind of change you are suggesting, the moon would be a clean smooth sphere instead of pock marked by craters millions and billions of years old.
$endgroup$
– Shufflepants
Jan 24 at 18:46
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Naturally occurring Thermochromic chemicals.
Those of us old enough to remember the 1970s remember mood rings.
While such chemicals are unlikely as natural deposits, it is fairly easy to imagine that some flowering plants could incorporate such as a form of sexual attraction or such-like.
No earth-like plants exist without the benefit of atmosphere, but perhaps an different design of plant forms could exist in thin carbon-dioxide atmosphere that may be compatible with your story. A hard-vacuum is likely to make significant plant-like coverage impossible.
Any high-contrast vegetation that has a short lifespan would perhaps be sufficient, esp. competing forms with different reflectance characteristics.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Naturally occurring Thermochromic chemicals.
Those of us old enough to remember the 1970s remember mood rings.
While such chemicals are unlikely as natural deposits, it is fairly easy to imagine that some flowering plants could incorporate such as a form of sexual attraction or such-like.
No earth-like plants exist without the benefit of atmosphere, but perhaps an different design of plant forms could exist in thin carbon-dioxide atmosphere that may be compatible with your story. A hard-vacuum is likely to make significant plant-like coverage impossible.
Any high-contrast vegetation that has a short lifespan would perhaps be sufficient, esp. competing forms with different reflectance characteristics.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Naturally occurring Thermochromic chemicals.
Those of us old enough to remember the 1970s remember mood rings.
While such chemicals are unlikely as natural deposits, it is fairly easy to imagine that some flowering plants could incorporate such as a form of sexual attraction or such-like.
No earth-like plants exist without the benefit of atmosphere, but perhaps an different design of plant forms could exist in thin carbon-dioxide atmosphere that may be compatible with your story. A hard-vacuum is likely to make significant plant-like coverage impossible.
Any high-contrast vegetation that has a short lifespan would perhaps be sufficient, esp. competing forms with different reflectance characteristics.
$endgroup$
Naturally occurring Thermochromic chemicals.
Those of us old enough to remember the 1970s remember mood rings.
While such chemicals are unlikely as natural deposits, it is fairly easy to imagine that some flowering plants could incorporate such as a form of sexual attraction or such-like.
No earth-like plants exist without the benefit of atmosphere, but perhaps an different design of plant forms could exist in thin carbon-dioxide atmosphere that may be compatible with your story. A hard-vacuum is likely to make significant plant-like coverage impossible.
Any high-contrast vegetation that has a short lifespan would perhaps be sufficient, esp. competing forms with different reflectance characteristics.
answered Jan 17 at 18:42
Gary WalkerGary Walker
15.3k23057
15.3k23057
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Take Pluto as inspiration. From the wiki (all emphasis are mine):
Pluto's surface is composed of more than 98 percent solid nitrogen, with traces of methane and carbon monoxide. The face of Pluto oriented toward Charon contains more solid methane, whereas the opposite face contains more nitrogen and solid carbon monoxide. Distribution of volatile ices is thought to be season-dependent and influenced more by solar insolation and topography than subsurface processes.
(...)
Pluto's surface color has changed between 1994 and 2003: the northern polar region has brightened and the southern hemisphere has darkened. Pluto's overall redness has also increased substantially between 2000 and 2002. These rapid changes are probably related to seasonal condensation and sublimation of portions of Pluto's atmosphere (...)
Now this may seem to conflict with one of your requirements:
The moon does not have an atmosphere
But again, according to another page in Wikipedia:
The surface pressure of the atmosphere of Pluto, measured by New Horizons in 2015, is about 1 Pa (10 μbar), roughly 100,000 times less than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
Some satellites in LEO face similar atmospheric pressures and need reboosting every then. Bottom line being: that's what objects in space around us face. So for all practical purposes Pluto's surface is exposed to a vacuum. Standing naked on it wouldn't be much different from being naked on Earth's orbit.
$endgroup$
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The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
$endgroup$
– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
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I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
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– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
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– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
$begingroup$
@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
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– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
1
$begingroup$
@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
$endgroup$
– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Take Pluto as inspiration. From the wiki (all emphasis are mine):
Pluto's surface is composed of more than 98 percent solid nitrogen, with traces of methane and carbon monoxide. The face of Pluto oriented toward Charon contains more solid methane, whereas the opposite face contains more nitrogen and solid carbon monoxide. Distribution of volatile ices is thought to be season-dependent and influenced more by solar insolation and topography than subsurface processes.
(...)
Pluto's surface color has changed between 1994 and 2003: the northern polar region has brightened and the southern hemisphere has darkened. Pluto's overall redness has also increased substantially between 2000 and 2002. These rapid changes are probably related to seasonal condensation and sublimation of portions of Pluto's atmosphere (...)
Now this may seem to conflict with one of your requirements:
The moon does not have an atmosphere
But again, according to another page in Wikipedia:
The surface pressure of the atmosphere of Pluto, measured by New Horizons in 2015, is about 1 Pa (10 μbar), roughly 100,000 times less than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
Some satellites in LEO face similar atmospheric pressures and need reboosting every then. Bottom line being: that's what objects in space around us face. So for all practical purposes Pluto's surface is exposed to a vacuum. Standing naked on it wouldn't be much different from being naked on Earth's orbit.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
$endgroup$
– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
$begingroup$
I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
$begingroup$
@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
1
$begingroup$
@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
$endgroup$
– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Take Pluto as inspiration. From the wiki (all emphasis are mine):
Pluto's surface is composed of more than 98 percent solid nitrogen, with traces of methane and carbon monoxide. The face of Pluto oriented toward Charon contains more solid methane, whereas the opposite face contains more nitrogen and solid carbon monoxide. Distribution of volatile ices is thought to be season-dependent and influenced more by solar insolation and topography than subsurface processes.
(...)
Pluto's surface color has changed between 1994 and 2003: the northern polar region has brightened and the southern hemisphere has darkened. Pluto's overall redness has also increased substantially between 2000 and 2002. These rapid changes are probably related to seasonal condensation and sublimation of portions of Pluto's atmosphere (...)
Now this may seem to conflict with one of your requirements:
The moon does not have an atmosphere
But again, according to another page in Wikipedia:
The surface pressure of the atmosphere of Pluto, measured by New Horizons in 2015, is about 1 Pa (10 μbar), roughly 100,000 times less than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
Some satellites in LEO face similar atmospheric pressures and need reboosting every then. Bottom line being: that's what objects in space around us face. So for all practical purposes Pluto's surface is exposed to a vacuum. Standing naked on it wouldn't be much different from being naked on Earth's orbit.
$endgroup$
Take Pluto as inspiration. From the wiki (all emphasis are mine):
Pluto's surface is composed of more than 98 percent solid nitrogen, with traces of methane and carbon monoxide. The face of Pluto oriented toward Charon contains more solid methane, whereas the opposite face contains more nitrogen and solid carbon monoxide. Distribution of volatile ices is thought to be season-dependent and influenced more by solar insolation and topography than subsurface processes.
(...)
Pluto's surface color has changed between 1994 and 2003: the northern polar region has brightened and the southern hemisphere has darkened. Pluto's overall redness has also increased substantially between 2000 and 2002. These rapid changes are probably related to seasonal condensation and sublimation of portions of Pluto's atmosphere (...)
Now this may seem to conflict with one of your requirements:
The moon does not have an atmosphere
But again, according to another page in Wikipedia:
The surface pressure of the atmosphere of Pluto, measured by New Horizons in 2015, is about 1 Pa (10 μbar), roughly 100,000 times less than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
Some satellites in LEO face similar atmospheric pressures and need reboosting every then. Bottom line being: that's what objects in space around us face. So for all practical purposes Pluto's surface is exposed to a vacuum. Standing naked on it wouldn't be much different from being naked on Earth's orbit.
answered Jan 17 at 18:37
RenanRenan
49.1k13112247
49.1k13112247
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The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
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– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
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I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
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– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
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Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
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– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
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@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
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– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
1
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@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
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– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
$endgroup$
– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
$begingroup$
I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
$begingroup$
@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
1
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@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
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– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
$begingroup$
The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
$endgroup$
– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
$begingroup$
The changes you describe are seasonal in nature, and wouldn't give a changing appearance on the order of days.
$endgroup$
– Nuclear Wang
Jan 17 at 21:09
$begingroup$
I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
$begingroup$
I said use Pluto as an inspiration. It is very far from the Sun, so the temperature differences between its day and night are smaller than our Moon's. At our distance from the Sun the changes could happen daily.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:14
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer. It sounds really intetesting, but could this kind of condensation occur in such a magnitude that it changes the look of the moon on a daily basis? Also please note that I edited the question to allow an atmosphere.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 17 at 21:27
$begingroup$
@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
$begingroup$
@elmy yes. The (non-water) ices on the moon will not melt completely, but will become slush that slowly ane constantly moves as the Moon's own terminator line terminator line moves over its surface.
$endgroup$
– Renan
Jan 17 at 21:35
1
1
$begingroup$
@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
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– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
$begingroup$
@Elmy Yes it could. We don't know what the climate is like where you live, but in in the UK on winter mornings the ground is often covered overnight with white frost which melts within a few hours after sunrise.
$endgroup$
– alephzero
Jan 17 at 23:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your planet is tidally locked and it's moon is made of something with a low melting point.
This means that it's eternal twilight on the narrow band of habitable terrain on your planet, and that the day is marked by the ascent of the moon, which, continually melted by the sun and frozen by the planet's shadow, changes each day.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your planet is tidally locked and it's moon is made of something with a low melting point.
This means that it's eternal twilight on the narrow band of habitable terrain on your planet, and that the day is marked by the ascent of the moon, which, continually melted by the sun and frozen by the planet's shadow, changes each day.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your planet is tidally locked and it's moon is made of something with a low melting point.
This means that it's eternal twilight on the narrow band of habitable terrain on your planet, and that the day is marked by the ascent of the moon, which, continually melted by the sun and frozen by the planet's shadow, changes each day.
$endgroup$
Your planet is tidally locked and it's moon is made of something with a low melting point.
This means that it's eternal twilight on the narrow band of habitable terrain on your planet, and that the day is marked by the ascent of the moon, which, continually melted by the sun and frozen by the planet's shadow, changes each day.
answered Jan 18 at 0:43
Iron GremlinIron Gremlin
6797
6797
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Oceans of nonlinear chemical oscillator compound!
Imagine that there`s an ocean on the moon that is filled to the brim with e.g. malonic acid and potassium bromate. That would yield literal chaotic color patterns floating both on its surface and all the way down to the seabed.
This is called the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction.
All weather changes, including the amount of sunlight absorbed, the surface waves, the underwater currents (well, technically it`s not water, but whatever), the winds, the evaporation, the volcanic activity — everything of the sort would add to the total randomness and uniqueness of the pattern.
Here`s a video of it oscillating in a Petri dish. And here`s another one.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Oceans of nonlinear chemical oscillator compound!
Imagine that there`s an ocean on the moon that is filled to the brim with e.g. malonic acid and potassium bromate. That would yield literal chaotic color patterns floating both on its surface and all the way down to the seabed.
This is called the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction.
All weather changes, including the amount of sunlight absorbed, the surface waves, the underwater currents (well, technically it`s not water, but whatever), the winds, the evaporation, the volcanic activity — everything of the sort would add to the total randomness and uniqueness of the pattern.
Here`s a video of it oscillating in a Petri dish. And here`s another one.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Oceans of nonlinear chemical oscillator compound!
Imagine that there`s an ocean on the moon that is filled to the brim with e.g. malonic acid and potassium bromate. That would yield literal chaotic color patterns floating both on its surface and all the way down to the seabed.
This is called the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction.
All weather changes, including the amount of sunlight absorbed, the surface waves, the underwater currents (well, technically it`s not water, but whatever), the winds, the evaporation, the volcanic activity — everything of the sort would add to the total randomness and uniqueness of the pattern.
Here`s a video of it oscillating in a Petri dish. And here`s another one.
$endgroup$
Oceans of nonlinear chemical oscillator compound!
Imagine that there`s an ocean on the moon that is filled to the brim with e.g. malonic acid and potassium bromate. That would yield literal chaotic color patterns floating both on its surface and all the way down to the seabed.
This is called the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction.
All weather changes, including the amount of sunlight absorbed, the surface waves, the underwater currents (well, technically it`s not water, but whatever), the winds, the evaporation, the volcanic activity — everything of the sort would add to the total randomness and uniqueness of the pattern.
Here`s a video of it oscillating in a Petri dish. And here`s another one.
edited Jan 17 at 22:16
answered Jan 17 at 21:43
hidefromkgbhidefromkgb
24318
24318
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A watery body, such as Enceladus (maybe Ceres as long as it has an icy core), orbits as a moon. This moon could have a very eccentric orbit, causing tidal forced to act upon it, causing cryo-volcanism. these cryovolcanos can cover the surface with various chemicals and minerals (water, salty brine, methane, ethane, or other organics) in an ever changing pattern.
The cracking and shifting of the fragile surface would also aid in the changing surface patterns.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A watery body, such as Enceladus (maybe Ceres as long as it has an icy core), orbits as a moon. This moon could have a very eccentric orbit, causing tidal forced to act upon it, causing cryo-volcanism. these cryovolcanos can cover the surface with various chemicals and minerals (water, salty brine, methane, ethane, or other organics) in an ever changing pattern.
The cracking and shifting of the fragile surface would also aid in the changing surface patterns.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
A watery body, such as Enceladus (maybe Ceres as long as it has an icy core), orbits as a moon. This moon could have a very eccentric orbit, causing tidal forced to act upon it, causing cryo-volcanism. these cryovolcanos can cover the surface with various chemicals and minerals (water, salty brine, methane, ethane, or other organics) in an ever changing pattern.
The cracking and shifting of the fragile surface would also aid in the changing surface patterns.
$endgroup$
A watery body, such as Enceladus (maybe Ceres as long as it has an icy core), orbits as a moon. This moon could have a very eccentric orbit, causing tidal forced to act upon it, causing cryo-volcanism. these cryovolcanos can cover the surface with various chemicals and minerals (water, salty brine, methane, ethane, or other organics) in an ever changing pattern.
The cracking and shifting of the fragile surface would also aid in the changing surface patterns.
edited Jan 17 at 22:52
answered Jan 17 at 22:47
sonvarsonvar
2616
2616
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The "no atmosphere" requirement makes this especially tough because it means we're limited to solid materials at the surface. Any liquid would evaporate in the near-perfect vacuum, and any appreciable amount of gas would be, well, an atmosphere.
You say the moon hasn't rotated, so that leads me to assume it is tidally locked. My suggestion would be a very slow cyclical chemical reaction which occurs in the moon's crust at the surface, similar to the iodine clock reaction. I'm imagining bands of light or color slowly propagating across the surface of the moon, sort of like the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, taking a few hours to travel the full diameter of the moon's disc. This reaction could be catalyzed by the sunlight hitting the surface of the moon as it faces away from the planet, then continue through the moon's "night", where it is visible from the surface of the parent planet.
This setup could make the moon potentially livable (not a volcanic mess like Io) while avoiding any surface liquids or gases.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
$begingroup$
Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
$begingroup$
No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
$endgroup$
– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
$begingroup$
Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The "no atmosphere" requirement makes this especially tough because it means we're limited to solid materials at the surface. Any liquid would evaporate in the near-perfect vacuum, and any appreciable amount of gas would be, well, an atmosphere.
You say the moon hasn't rotated, so that leads me to assume it is tidally locked. My suggestion would be a very slow cyclical chemical reaction which occurs in the moon's crust at the surface, similar to the iodine clock reaction. I'm imagining bands of light or color slowly propagating across the surface of the moon, sort of like the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, taking a few hours to travel the full diameter of the moon's disc. This reaction could be catalyzed by the sunlight hitting the surface of the moon as it faces away from the planet, then continue through the moon's "night", where it is visible from the surface of the parent planet.
This setup could make the moon potentially livable (not a volcanic mess like Io) while avoiding any surface liquids or gases.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
$begingroup$
Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
$begingroup$
No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
$endgroup$
– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
$begingroup$
Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The "no atmosphere" requirement makes this especially tough because it means we're limited to solid materials at the surface. Any liquid would evaporate in the near-perfect vacuum, and any appreciable amount of gas would be, well, an atmosphere.
You say the moon hasn't rotated, so that leads me to assume it is tidally locked. My suggestion would be a very slow cyclical chemical reaction which occurs in the moon's crust at the surface, similar to the iodine clock reaction. I'm imagining bands of light or color slowly propagating across the surface of the moon, sort of like the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, taking a few hours to travel the full diameter of the moon's disc. This reaction could be catalyzed by the sunlight hitting the surface of the moon as it faces away from the planet, then continue through the moon's "night", where it is visible from the surface of the parent planet.
This setup could make the moon potentially livable (not a volcanic mess like Io) while avoiding any surface liquids or gases.
$endgroup$
The "no atmosphere" requirement makes this especially tough because it means we're limited to solid materials at the surface. Any liquid would evaporate in the near-perfect vacuum, and any appreciable amount of gas would be, well, an atmosphere.
You say the moon hasn't rotated, so that leads me to assume it is tidally locked. My suggestion would be a very slow cyclical chemical reaction which occurs in the moon's crust at the surface, similar to the iodine clock reaction. I'm imagining bands of light or color slowly propagating across the surface of the moon, sort of like the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, taking a few hours to travel the full diameter of the moon's disc. This reaction could be catalyzed by the sunlight hitting the surface of the moon as it faces away from the planet, then continue through the moon's "night", where it is visible from the surface of the parent planet.
This setup could make the moon potentially livable (not a volcanic mess like Io) while avoiding any surface liquids or gases.
answered Jan 18 at 15:07
Tyler KingTyler King
213
213
1
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
$begingroup$
Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
$begingroup$
No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
$endgroup$
– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
$begingroup$
Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
$begingroup$
Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
$begingroup$
No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
$endgroup$
– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
$begingroup$
Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
1
1
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
$begingroup$
Thanks for your answer, this surely is a new and very interesting approach. Please note, though, that the question was edited to allow an atmosphere. It also doesn't say that the moon has to be tidally locked, it just has to change in such a magnitude that it looks different every day without a predictable pattern.
$endgroup$
– Elmy
Jan 18 at 15:17
$begingroup$
Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
$begingroup$
Ah, I see I missed the word "just" in "It didn't just rotate". I took that to explictly mean that it did not rotate, and was therefore tidally locked. Fortunately, I don't think that would have any major impact on the scheme I proposed except for timing.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 15:20
$begingroup$
No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
$endgroup$
– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
$begingroup$
No, liquids do not automatically evaporate in a vacuum. See "partial pressure" .
$endgroup$
– Carl Witthoft
Jan 18 at 18:36
$begingroup$
Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
$begingroup$
Liquids automatically evaporate all the time at all pressures, which is what gives rise to partial pressure. Boiling occurs when the partial pressure of the liquid is greater than atmospheric pressure. If atmospheric pressure is 0, any surface liquid would have a partial pressure greater than 0 and boil away.
$endgroup$
– Tyler King
Jan 18 at 18:40
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That solar system could be experiencing a phenomenon like the late heavy bombardment: the moon is constantly hit by meteorites, so that it is continuously shaped by these impacts.
The problem is that these meteorites must be very frequent (say in the order of the dozen of impacts in a day), but quite small - in the range of 10-20 meters - in order not to cause damage when they fall onto the main planet, burning in its atmosphere. In this case probably you should somehow justify the lack of bigger asteroids.
You could also point that the moon is of recent formation (maybe captured by the gravity of the planet), which implies its core is still active and gives origin to some vulcanic activity that shapes its surface (but in this case the changes would be slower and the surface of the moon wouldn't change a lot in the span of some days).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That solar system could be experiencing a phenomenon like the late heavy bombardment: the moon is constantly hit by meteorites, so that it is continuously shaped by these impacts.
The problem is that these meteorites must be very frequent (say in the order of the dozen of impacts in a day), but quite small - in the range of 10-20 meters - in order not to cause damage when they fall onto the main planet, burning in its atmosphere. In this case probably you should somehow justify the lack of bigger asteroids.
You could also point that the moon is of recent formation (maybe captured by the gravity of the planet), which implies its core is still active and gives origin to some vulcanic activity that shapes its surface (but in this case the changes would be slower and the surface of the moon wouldn't change a lot in the span of some days).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That solar system could be experiencing a phenomenon like the late heavy bombardment: the moon is constantly hit by meteorites, so that it is continuously shaped by these impacts.
The problem is that these meteorites must be very frequent (say in the order of the dozen of impacts in a day), but quite small - in the range of 10-20 meters - in order not to cause damage when they fall onto the main planet, burning in its atmosphere. In this case probably you should somehow justify the lack of bigger asteroids.
You could also point that the moon is of recent formation (maybe captured by the gravity of the planet), which implies its core is still active and gives origin to some vulcanic activity that shapes its surface (but in this case the changes would be slower and the surface of the moon wouldn't change a lot in the span of some days).
$endgroup$
That solar system could be experiencing a phenomenon like the late heavy bombardment: the moon is constantly hit by meteorites, so that it is continuously shaped by these impacts.
The problem is that these meteorites must be very frequent (say in the order of the dozen of impacts in a day), but quite small - in the range of 10-20 meters - in order not to cause damage when they fall onto the main planet, burning in its atmosphere. In this case probably you should somehow justify the lack of bigger asteroids.
You could also point that the moon is of recent formation (maybe captured by the gravity of the planet), which implies its core is still active and gives origin to some vulcanic activity that shapes its surface (but in this case the changes would be slower and the surface of the moon wouldn't change a lot in the span of some days).
answered Jan 17 at 18:43
McTroopersMcTroopers
5955
5955
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Possibly there could be intelligence of some sort on the moon and their activities can make a big visual change in the appearance of large sections of the moon during short periods.
Possibly they are artists trying out various "paint" patterns to see which make the moon look best.
Perhaps they move countless millions of large vehicles of various colors around on the moon, arranging them in various patterns as part of some sort of "dance".
Maybe they are trying to send a message to the natives of the planet and thus making an ever changing series of patterns on the moon.
A century or so ago an astronomer believed that some tiny changes of color he observed on the moon were the results of vast hordes of insects moving around.
So possibly on your moon thick areas of vegetation spring up, changing the color of vast regions, and then vast wandering hordes of insects travel toward them, changing the face of the moon as they move. When the insects arrive at the forest or meadow or swamp their color mingles with the color of the plants and changes the color of the region as seen from the planet.
So the insects eat all the vegetation in the region, changing its color, and leave their wastes (containing many seeds) behind to fertilize the soil. The insects move on, searching for another area of vegetation, and the area is now a different color, barren of vegetation until the seeds sprout and start to grow. Eventually the plants become thick enough to change the color of the region back to vegetation colored, then the region retains that color until the same or a different horde of insects arrives to eat the vegetation.
Of course it seem rather doubtful that a planet small enough to be habitable would have a moon large enough to be habitable for at least some types of life. That would make them seem a lot more like a double planet than like a planet and its moon.
Of course the intelligent beings on the moon don't have to be living beings; they could be machines.
Or the two worlds could both be habitable planets orbiting their star if their orbits are a lot closer to each other than any planetary orbits in our solar system, so that when the planets pass closest to each other the natives of one can see surface features on the other. There is actually a known solar system where planets in the habitable zone of their star do sometimes orbit close enough for someone on one of them to see surface features on the other - TRAPPIST-1.
The distance between the orbits of TRAPPIST-1b and TRAPPIST-1c is only 1.6 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon. The planets should appear prominently in each other's skies, in some cases appearing several times larger than the Moon appears from Earth.[41] A year on the closest planet passes in only 1.5 Earth days, while the seventh planet's year passes in only 18.8 days.[38][34]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRAPPIST-11
Or maybe the "planet" and "moon" are actually both moons that orbit a gas giant planet.
Your "planet" could actually be a giant, Earth sized habitable moon, and the "moon" would orbit closer to the gas giant. Sometimes your "planet" and the inner moon would be almost on opposite sides of the gas giant and the inner moon wouldn't look big enough for details to be visible. But at intervals, probably every few days, the inner moon would pass close to the outer habitable moon and the natives of the habitable moon could see details of the surface of the inner moon and note the changes (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star) .
If the inner moon orbits close enough to the gas giant the tidal heating should make the inner moon hyper volcanic like Io, the innermost Galilean moon of Jupiter. Various volcanoes might erupt often, spewing out vast amounts of lava of various colors to constantly resurface the inner moon. So each time that details of the inner moon were visible the surface patterns would be at least slightly different.
The problem with this is that the clouds and weather patterns on the gas giant planet would be visible all the time and would also change, thus possibly distracting the natives of the habitable moon from the show on the inner moon.
Possibly the moon in your story could suffer from tidal heating and constant resurfacing if it orbited a habitable planet in the right way. It would probably have to have an eccentric orbit which made it get noticeably farther and closer to the planet at various points in its orbit, and thus the patterns on its surface would only be visible when the moon was closer to the planet (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star).
Possibly someone here can calculate if it is possible for a habitable planet to have a presumably recently captured moon with enough tidal heating to be constantly resurfacing itself.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Possibly there could be intelligence of some sort on the moon and their activities can make a big visual change in the appearance of large sections of the moon during short periods.
Possibly they are artists trying out various "paint" patterns to see which make the moon look best.
Perhaps they move countless millions of large vehicles of various colors around on the moon, arranging them in various patterns as part of some sort of "dance".
Maybe they are trying to send a message to the natives of the planet and thus making an ever changing series of patterns on the moon.
A century or so ago an astronomer believed that some tiny changes of color he observed on the moon were the results of vast hordes of insects moving around.
So possibly on your moon thick areas of vegetation spring up, changing the color of vast regions, and then vast wandering hordes of insects travel toward them, changing the face of the moon as they move. When the insects arrive at the forest or meadow or swamp their color mingles with the color of the plants and changes the color of the region as seen from the planet.
So the insects eat all the vegetation in the region, changing its color, and leave their wastes (containing many seeds) behind to fertilize the soil. The insects move on, searching for another area of vegetation, and the area is now a different color, barren of vegetation until the seeds sprout and start to grow. Eventually the plants become thick enough to change the color of the region back to vegetation colored, then the region retains that color until the same or a different horde of insects arrives to eat the vegetation.
Of course it seem rather doubtful that a planet small enough to be habitable would have a moon large enough to be habitable for at least some types of life. That would make them seem a lot more like a double planet than like a planet and its moon.
Of course the intelligent beings on the moon don't have to be living beings; they could be machines.
Or the two worlds could both be habitable planets orbiting their star if their orbits are a lot closer to each other than any planetary orbits in our solar system, so that when the planets pass closest to each other the natives of one can see surface features on the other. There is actually a known solar system where planets in the habitable zone of their star do sometimes orbit close enough for someone on one of them to see surface features on the other - TRAPPIST-1.
The distance between the orbits of TRAPPIST-1b and TRAPPIST-1c is only 1.6 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon. The planets should appear prominently in each other's skies, in some cases appearing several times larger than the Moon appears from Earth.[41] A year on the closest planet passes in only 1.5 Earth days, while the seventh planet's year passes in only 18.8 days.[38][34]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRAPPIST-11
Or maybe the "planet" and "moon" are actually both moons that orbit a gas giant planet.
Your "planet" could actually be a giant, Earth sized habitable moon, and the "moon" would orbit closer to the gas giant. Sometimes your "planet" and the inner moon would be almost on opposite sides of the gas giant and the inner moon wouldn't look big enough for details to be visible. But at intervals, probably every few days, the inner moon would pass close to the outer habitable moon and the natives of the habitable moon could see details of the surface of the inner moon and note the changes (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star) .
If the inner moon orbits close enough to the gas giant the tidal heating should make the inner moon hyper volcanic like Io, the innermost Galilean moon of Jupiter. Various volcanoes might erupt often, spewing out vast amounts of lava of various colors to constantly resurface the inner moon. So each time that details of the inner moon were visible the surface patterns would be at least slightly different.
The problem with this is that the clouds and weather patterns on the gas giant planet would be visible all the time and would also change, thus possibly distracting the natives of the habitable moon from the show on the inner moon.
Possibly the moon in your story could suffer from tidal heating and constant resurfacing if it orbited a habitable planet in the right way. It would probably have to have an eccentric orbit which made it get noticeably farther and closer to the planet at various points in its orbit, and thus the patterns on its surface would only be visible when the moon was closer to the planet (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star).
Possibly someone here can calculate if it is possible for a habitable planet to have a presumably recently captured moon with enough tidal heating to be constantly resurfacing itself.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Possibly there could be intelligence of some sort on the moon and their activities can make a big visual change in the appearance of large sections of the moon during short periods.
Possibly they are artists trying out various "paint" patterns to see which make the moon look best.
Perhaps they move countless millions of large vehicles of various colors around on the moon, arranging them in various patterns as part of some sort of "dance".
Maybe they are trying to send a message to the natives of the planet and thus making an ever changing series of patterns on the moon.
A century or so ago an astronomer believed that some tiny changes of color he observed on the moon were the results of vast hordes of insects moving around.
So possibly on your moon thick areas of vegetation spring up, changing the color of vast regions, and then vast wandering hordes of insects travel toward them, changing the face of the moon as they move. When the insects arrive at the forest or meadow or swamp their color mingles with the color of the plants and changes the color of the region as seen from the planet.
So the insects eat all the vegetation in the region, changing its color, and leave their wastes (containing many seeds) behind to fertilize the soil. The insects move on, searching for another area of vegetation, and the area is now a different color, barren of vegetation until the seeds sprout and start to grow. Eventually the plants become thick enough to change the color of the region back to vegetation colored, then the region retains that color until the same or a different horde of insects arrives to eat the vegetation.
Of course it seem rather doubtful that a planet small enough to be habitable would have a moon large enough to be habitable for at least some types of life. That would make them seem a lot more like a double planet than like a planet and its moon.
Of course the intelligent beings on the moon don't have to be living beings; they could be machines.
Or the two worlds could both be habitable planets orbiting their star if their orbits are a lot closer to each other than any planetary orbits in our solar system, so that when the planets pass closest to each other the natives of one can see surface features on the other. There is actually a known solar system where planets in the habitable zone of their star do sometimes orbit close enough for someone on one of them to see surface features on the other - TRAPPIST-1.
The distance between the orbits of TRAPPIST-1b and TRAPPIST-1c is only 1.6 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon. The planets should appear prominently in each other's skies, in some cases appearing several times larger than the Moon appears from Earth.[41] A year on the closest planet passes in only 1.5 Earth days, while the seventh planet's year passes in only 18.8 days.[38][34]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRAPPIST-11
Or maybe the "planet" and "moon" are actually both moons that orbit a gas giant planet.
Your "planet" could actually be a giant, Earth sized habitable moon, and the "moon" would orbit closer to the gas giant. Sometimes your "planet" and the inner moon would be almost on opposite sides of the gas giant and the inner moon wouldn't look big enough for details to be visible. But at intervals, probably every few days, the inner moon would pass close to the outer habitable moon and the natives of the habitable moon could see details of the surface of the inner moon and note the changes (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star) .
If the inner moon orbits close enough to the gas giant the tidal heating should make the inner moon hyper volcanic like Io, the innermost Galilean moon of Jupiter. Various volcanoes might erupt often, spewing out vast amounts of lava of various colors to constantly resurface the inner moon. So each time that details of the inner moon were visible the surface patterns would be at least slightly different.
The problem with this is that the clouds and weather patterns on the gas giant planet would be visible all the time and would also change, thus possibly distracting the natives of the habitable moon from the show on the inner moon.
Possibly the moon in your story could suffer from tidal heating and constant resurfacing if it orbited a habitable planet in the right way. It would probably have to have an eccentric orbit which made it get noticeably farther and closer to the planet at various points in its orbit, and thus the patterns on its surface would only be visible when the moon was closer to the planet (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star).
Possibly someone here can calculate if it is possible for a habitable planet to have a presumably recently captured moon with enough tidal heating to be constantly resurfacing itself.
$endgroup$
Possibly there could be intelligence of some sort on the moon and their activities can make a big visual change in the appearance of large sections of the moon during short periods.
Possibly they are artists trying out various "paint" patterns to see which make the moon look best.
Perhaps they move countless millions of large vehicles of various colors around on the moon, arranging them in various patterns as part of some sort of "dance".
Maybe they are trying to send a message to the natives of the planet and thus making an ever changing series of patterns on the moon.
A century or so ago an astronomer believed that some tiny changes of color he observed on the moon were the results of vast hordes of insects moving around.
So possibly on your moon thick areas of vegetation spring up, changing the color of vast regions, and then vast wandering hordes of insects travel toward them, changing the face of the moon as they move. When the insects arrive at the forest or meadow or swamp their color mingles with the color of the plants and changes the color of the region as seen from the planet.
So the insects eat all the vegetation in the region, changing its color, and leave their wastes (containing many seeds) behind to fertilize the soil. The insects move on, searching for another area of vegetation, and the area is now a different color, barren of vegetation until the seeds sprout and start to grow. Eventually the plants become thick enough to change the color of the region back to vegetation colored, then the region retains that color until the same or a different horde of insects arrives to eat the vegetation.
Of course it seem rather doubtful that a planet small enough to be habitable would have a moon large enough to be habitable for at least some types of life. That would make them seem a lot more like a double planet than like a planet and its moon.
Of course the intelligent beings on the moon don't have to be living beings; they could be machines.
Or the two worlds could both be habitable planets orbiting their star if their orbits are a lot closer to each other than any planetary orbits in our solar system, so that when the planets pass closest to each other the natives of one can see surface features on the other. There is actually a known solar system where planets in the habitable zone of their star do sometimes orbit close enough for someone on one of them to see surface features on the other - TRAPPIST-1.
The distance between the orbits of TRAPPIST-1b and TRAPPIST-1c is only 1.6 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon. The planets should appear prominently in each other's skies, in some cases appearing several times larger than the Moon appears from Earth.[41] A year on the closest planet passes in only 1.5 Earth days, while the seventh planet's year passes in only 18.8 days.[38][34]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRAPPIST-11
Or maybe the "planet" and "moon" are actually both moons that orbit a gas giant planet.
Your "planet" could actually be a giant, Earth sized habitable moon, and the "moon" would orbit closer to the gas giant. Sometimes your "planet" and the inner moon would be almost on opposite sides of the gas giant and the inner moon wouldn't look big enough for details to be visible. But at intervals, probably every few days, the inner moon would pass close to the outer habitable moon and the natives of the habitable moon could see details of the surface of the inner moon and note the changes (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star) .
If the inner moon orbits close enough to the gas giant the tidal heating should make the inner moon hyper volcanic like Io, the innermost Galilean moon of Jupiter. Various volcanoes might erupt often, spewing out vast amounts of lava of various colors to constantly resurface the inner moon. So each time that details of the inner moon were visible the surface patterns would be at least slightly different.
The problem with this is that the clouds and weather patterns on the gas giant planet would be visible all the time and would also change, thus possibly distracting the natives of the habitable moon from the show on the inner moon.
Possibly the moon in your story could suffer from tidal heating and constant resurfacing if it orbited a habitable planet in the right way. It would probably have to have an eccentric orbit which made it get noticeably farther and closer to the planet at various points in its orbit, and thus the patterns on its surface would only be visible when the moon was closer to the planet (and only in the parts of the moon that were lit by their star).
Possibly someone here can calculate if it is possible for a habitable planet to have a presumably recently captured moon with enough tidal heating to be constantly resurfacing itself.
answered Jan 17 at 19:03
M. A. GoldingM. A. Golding
9,021426
9,021426
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
An alien race has covered the planet, or whatever percentage you see fit with a giant TV screen.
Maybe they double as solar panels somehow.
Now they can literally change any part of the visible surface at whim.
Just wait till they spam you with moon sized commericials... muhhahahahaha!
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1
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worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
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– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
1
$begingroup$
I'll just leave this here...
$endgroup$
– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
An alien race has covered the planet, or whatever percentage you see fit with a giant TV screen.
Maybe they double as solar panels somehow.
Now they can literally change any part of the visible surface at whim.
Just wait till they spam you with moon sized commericials... muhhahahahaha!
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
1
$begingroup$
I'll just leave this here...
$endgroup$
– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
An alien race has covered the planet, or whatever percentage you see fit with a giant TV screen.
Maybe they double as solar panels somehow.
Now they can literally change any part of the visible surface at whim.
Just wait till they spam you with moon sized commericials... muhhahahahaha!
$endgroup$
An alien race has covered the planet, or whatever percentage you see fit with a giant TV screen.
Maybe they double as solar panels somehow.
Now they can literally change any part of the visible surface at whim.
Just wait till they spam you with moon sized commericials... muhhahahahaha!
answered Jan 17 at 19:16
cybernardcybernard
2,12636
2,12636
1
$begingroup$
worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
1
$begingroup$
I'll just leave this here...
$endgroup$
– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
1
$begingroup$
I'll just leave this here...
$endgroup$
– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
1
1
$begingroup$
worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
$begingroup$
worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/131609/…
$endgroup$
– chasly from UK
Jan 18 at 10:03
1
1
$begingroup$
I'll just leave this here...
$endgroup$
– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
$begingroup$
I'll just leave this here...
$endgroup$
– mlk
Jan 18 at 21:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Long ago an intelligent species found this moon and made plans to inhabit it. They created a network of tunnels all across the planet just below its surface. They planted the seeds of life and prepared to begin settling, but for some reason, they never did. So the moon was left, carved tunnels beneath its surface with the beginnings of life sprouting.
Fast forward a few thousand years to today, and the moon is buzzing with life--but that life all lives underground. A specific creature, the Mitter, has thrived on the underground flora and fauna. They are a fast moving species that is nomadic by nature, constantly moving to different places in different patterns every day.
However, when they move, they let off an abundance of benign chemicals that rise to the surface. These chemicals glow when in contact with the outside air--glowing a slightly different hue for each Mitter. With the abundance of the creatures and their unusual travel patterns, the planet appears to glow in ever changing shades and hues. Perhaps the Mitters' chemicals glow different colors depending on the time of season so the moon will go through phases of colors throughout the year?
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Long ago an intelligent species found this moon and made plans to inhabit it. They created a network of tunnels all across the planet just below its surface. They planted the seeds of life and prepared to begin settling, but for some reason, they never did. So the moon was left, carved tunnels beneath its surface with the beginnings of life sprouting.
Fast forward a few thousand years to today, and the moon is buzzing with life--but that life all lives underground. A specific creature, the Mitter, has thrived on the underground flora and fauna. They are a fast moving species that is nomadic by nature, constantly moving to different places in different patterns every day.
However, when they move, they let off an abundance of benign chemicals that rise to the surface. These chemicals glow when in contact with the outside air--glowing a slightly different hue for each Mitter. With the abundance of the creatures and their unusual travel patterns, the planet appears to glow in ever changing shades and hues. Perhaps the Mitters' chemicals glow different colors depending on the time of season so the moon will go through phases of colors throughout the year?
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Long ago an intelligent species found this moon and made plans to inhabit it. They created a network of tunnels all across the planet just below its surface. They planted the seeds of life and prepared to begin settling, but for some reason, they never did. So the moon was left, carved tunnels beneath its surface with the beginnings of life sprouting.
Fast forward a few thousand years to today, and the moon is buzzing with life--but that life all lives underground. A specific creature, the Mitter, has thrived on the underground flora and fauna. They are a fast moving species that is nomadic by nature, constantly moving to different places in different patterns every day.
However, when they move, they let off an abundance of benign chemicals that rise to the surface. These chemicals glow when in contact with the outside air--glowing a slightly different hue for each Mitter. With the abundance of the creatures and their unusual travel patterns, the planet appears to glow in ever changing shades and hues. Perhaps the Mitters' chemicals glow different colors depending on the time of season so the moon will go through phases of colors throughout the year?
$endgroup$
Long ago an intelligent species found this moon and made plans to inhabit it. They created a network of tunnels all across the planet just below its surface. They planted the seeds of life and prepared to begin settling, but for some reason, they never did. So the moon was left, carved tunnels beneath its surface with the beginnings of life sprouting.
Fast forward a few thousand years to today, and the moon is buzzing with life--but that life all lives underground. A specific creature, the Mitter, has thrived on the underground flora and fauna. They are a fast moving species that is nomadic by nature, constantly moving to different places in different patterns every day.
However, when they move, they let off an abundance of benign chemicals that rise to the surface. These chemicals glow when in contact with the outside air--glowing a slightly different hue for each Mitter. With the abundance of the creatures and their unusual travel patterns, the planet appears to glow in ever changing shades and hues. Perhaps the Mitters' chemicals glow different colors depending on the time of season so the moon will go through phases of colors throughout the year?
answered Jan 17 at 21:18
scohe001scohe001
8201517
8201517
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Here are some ideas, for a moon with a solid face:
- It could have really active plate tectonics moving the surface features around, which (as I understand it) would also imply a strong magnetic field and lots of volcanic activity.
- It could be very large, and the orbit of your planet could be just near-enough to an asteroid belt that whenever the moon moves toward the outer side of the orbit, it pulls asteroids into itself, actively rearranging the craters on its face
- If your planet is large, its moon could have a ring small of meteors around it, regularly falling into the moon (with no atmosphere to destroy them) and those could also rearrange the craters.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Here are some ideas, for a moon with a solid face:
- It could have really active plate tectonics moving the surface features around, which (as I understand it) would also imply a strong magnetic field and lots of volcanic activity.
- It could be very large, and the orbit of your planet could be just near-enough to an asteroid belt that whenever the moon moves toward the outer side of the orbit, it pulls asteroids into itself, actively rearranging the craters on its face
- If your planet is large, its moon could have a ring small of meteors around it, regularly falling into the moon (with no atmosphere to destroy them) and those could also rearrange the craters.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Here are some ideas, for a moon with a solid face:
- It could have really active plate tectonics moving the surface features around, which (as I understand it) would also imply a strong magnetic field and lots of volcanic activity.
- It could be very large, and the orbit of your planet could be just near-enough to an asteroid belt that whenever the moon moves toward the outer side of the orbit, it pulls asteroids into itself, actively rearranging the craters on its face
- If your planet is large, its moon could have a ring small of meteors around it, regularly falling into the moon (with no atmosphere to destroy them) and those could also rearrange the craters.
$endgroup$
Here are some ideas, for a moon with a solid face:
- It could have really active plate tectonics moving the surface features around, which (as I understand it) would also imply a strong magnetic field and lots of volcanic activity.
- It could be very large, and the orbit of your planet could be just near-enough to an asteroid belt that whenever the moon moves toward the outer side of the orbit, it pulls asteroids into itself, actively rearranging the craters on its face
- If your planet is large, its moon could have a ring small of meteors around it, regularly falling into the moon (with no atmosphere to destroy them) and those could also rearrange the craters.
answered Jan 17 at 22:34
boxcartenantboxcartenant
2,070117
2,070117
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Arctic sea ice is constantly changing, although not on a daily timescale:
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BothDismalEmperorpenguin.webp
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Arctic sea ice is constantly changing, although not on a daily timescale:
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BothDismalEmperorpenguin.webp
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Arctic sea ice is constantly changing, although not on a daily timescale:
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BothDismalEmperorpenguin.webp
$endgroup$
Arctic sea ice is constantly changing, although not on a daily timescale:
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BothDismalEmperorpenguin.webp
answered Jan 18 at 0:34
Keith McClaryKeith McClary
1592
1592
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The surface of the moon is covered in an exotic lifeform with an exceedingly rapid lifecycle. Colonies of this lifeform grow to cover large portions of the lunar surface in as little as 12 hours, competing for space with surrounding colonies, before rapidly crashing as soil fertility is depleted. No sooner has one colony collapsed, than another has begun its growth on another part of the moon's surface.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The surface of the moon is covered in an exotic lifeform with an exceedingly rapid lifecycle. Colonies of this lifeform grow to cover large portions of the lunar surface in as little as 12 hours, competing for space with surrounding colonies, before rapidly crashing as soil fertility is depleted. No sooner has one colony collapsed, than another has begun its growth on another part of the moon's surface.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The surface of the moon is covered in an exotic lifeform with an exceedingly rapid lifecycle. Colonies of this lifeform grow to cover large portions of the lunar surface in as little as 12 hours, competing for space with surrounding colonies, before rapidly crashing as soil fertility is depleted. No sooner has one colony collapsed, than another has begun its growth on another part of the moon's surface.
$endgroup$
The surface of the moon is covered in an exotic lifeform with an exceedingly rapid lifecycle. Colonies of this lifeform grow to cover large portions of the lunar surface in as little as 12 hours, competing for space with surrounding colonies, before rapidly crashing as soil fertility is depleted. No sooner has one colony collapsed, than another has begun its growth on another part of the moon's surface.
answered Jan 18 at 1:52
Arkenstein XIIArkenstein XII
2,958730
2,958730
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Wildly unstable plate-tectonics resulting in constant quakes and volcanic eruptions. There's always lava flowing somewhere, ash floating somewhere, and new rocks forming someplace else.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Wildly unstable plate-tectonics resulting in constant quakes and volcanic eruptions. There's always lava flowing somewhere, ash floating somewhere, and new rocks forming someplace else.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Wildly unstable plate-tectonics resulting in constant quakes and volcanic eruptions. There's always lava flowing somewhere, ash floating somewhere, and new rocks forming someplace else.
$endgroup$
Wildly unstable plate-tectonics resulting in constant quakes and volcanic eruptions. There's always lava flowing somewhere, ash floating somewhere, and new rocks forming someplace else.
answered Jan 18 at 21:51
TruthTruth
1136
1136
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There's the obvious option:
That's no moon. It's a space station.
There are many options what is its purpose then. It could be a hyperspace relay, where the surface features are related to how hyperspace works, and massive changes are result of tuning to different targets locations or "hyperspace weather" or whatnot.
It could be a fully automated data network relay, and it's that big because hyperspace relay just needs the size to open the rift to the hyperspace.
It could actually be travel relay, so it has to be big enough to fit the ships that travel through it. And the ships come in and exit inside the sphere. It could have a port for exiting, but nobody really cares to exit here. Or this system could be a protection zone for the natives, and nobody is allowed to show themselves. That could also explain why there maybe was extra effort to disguise the relay as a moon.
The relay could also be ancient, the aliens long gone (moved to better technologies, died out, transcended, whatever). Now the relay just sits there, adapting its surface to hyperspace changes, automated repair systems keeping it functional, potentially for as long as the star of the system keeps pumping energy out.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There's the obvious option:
That's no moon. It's a space station.
There are many options what is its purpose then. It could be a hyperspace relay, where the surface features are related to how hyperspace works, and massive changes are result of tuning to different targets locations or "hyperspace weather" or whatnot.
It could be a fully automated data network relay, and it's that big because hyperspace relay just needs the size to open the rift to the hyperspace.
It could actually be travel relay, so it has to be big enough to fit the ships that travel through it. And the ships come in and exit inside the sphere. It could have a port for exiting, but nobody really cares to exit here. Or this system could be a protection zone for the natives, and nobody is allowed to show themselves. That could also explain why there maybe was extra effort to disguise the relay as a moon.
The relay could also be ancient, the aliens long gone (moved to better technologies, died out, transcended, whatever). Now the relay just sits there, adapting its surface to hyperspace changes, automated repair systems keeping it functional, potentially for as long as the star of the system keeps pumping energy out.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There's the obvious option:
That's no moon. It's a space station.
There are many options what is its purpose then. It could be a hyperspace relay, where the surface features are related to how hyperspace works, and massive changes are result of tuning to different targets locations or "hyperspace weather" or whatnot.
It could be a fully automated data network relay, and it's that big because hyperspace relay just needs the size to open the rift to the hyperspace.
It could actually be travel relay, so it has to be big enough to fit the ships that travel through it. And the ships come in and exit inside the sphere. It could have a port for exiting, but nobody really cares to exit here. Or this system could be a protection zone for the natives, and nobody is allowed to show themselves. That could also explain why there maybe was extra effort to disguise the relay as a moon.
The relay could also be ancient, the aliens long gone (moved to better technologies, died out, transcended, whatever). Now the relay just sits there, adapting its surface to hyperspace changes, automated repair systems keeping it functional, potentially for as long as the star of the system keeps pumping energy out.
$endgroup$
There's the obvious option:
That's no moon. It's a space station.
There are many options what is its purpose then. It could be a hyperspace relay, where the surface features are related to how hyperspace works, and massive changes are result of tuning to different targets locations or "hyperspace weather" or whatnot.
It could be a fully automated data network relay, and it's that big because hyperspace relay just needs the size to open the rift to the hyperspace.
It could actually be travel relay, so it has to be big enough to fit the ships that travel through it. And the ships come in and exit inside the sphere. It could have a port for exiting, but nobody really cares to exit here. Or this system could be a protection zone for the natives, and nobody is allowed to show themselves. That could also explain why there maybe was extra effort to disguise the relay as a moon.
The relay could also be ancient, the aliens long gone (moved to better technologies, died out, transcended, whatever). Now the relay just sits there, adapting its surface to hyperspace changes, automated repair systems keeping it functional, potentially for as long as the star of the system keeps pumping energy out.
answered Jan 19 at 12:36
hydehyde
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protected by James♦ Jan 18 at 20:15
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Related: Always a full Moon for the Emperor - Can this be achieved with solar panels and LEDs?
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– Alexander
Jan 17 at 20:56
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It's Io! Of course, you'd be hard pressed to find a moon with a lot of geological activity without also having Io's conditions. (I.e. Orbiting a gas giant and surrounded by many other moons.) Maybe if the moon somehow formed very recently?
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– Lemma Prism
Jan 17 at 22:33
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Clouds don't necessarily look the same from space as they do from the ground. If you look at images of Earth from space, the clouds look pretty other-worldly to me. Plus, if your moon has a different chemistry from the planet, the clouds will look very different anyway - think about the clouds on Venus, or any of the gas giants.
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– Nathaniel
Jan 18 at 3:17
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I can't answer this in detail, but I suspect a liquid surface is ever-changing, no?
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– Mikey
Jan 18 at 15:55
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@Kapten-N Noted, but irrelevant for the question ;)
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– Elmy
Jan 18 at 16:49