Earth will manage to get hotter
Moon --- Earth L1 (easier said and done, but we should do it anyway)
Relocating our moon from its existing orbit, that's simply cruising a
little too close for our confort zone, out to being parked within the
orbit of Earth's L1, is an all around win-win for everything and
everyone on Earth, although at least half the moon is going to become
a little worse off (sorry about that, it can't be helped).
This is not an overnight or even a decade worthy consideration, but
more than likely a century worth of applied physics on behalf of
migrating 7.35e22 kg away from it's existing orbit. Trust me, it's
going to be so much easier said than done.
Accomplishing this environmental salvaging task on behalf of achieving
tidal moderation, of what should become worth slightly more than half
of our existing tidal forced situation, as such is going to
extensively moderate the amount of this orbiting mascon energy that's
unavoidably converted into various forms of terrestrial friction, and
thus into creating internal and surface heat, and that's not to
mention our accomplishing the little further reduction in reflected
and secondary IR/FIR energy that's currently derived from our
physically dark moon, will obviously no longer exist once that moon is
situated at Earth's L1.
The amount of shade or solar isolation created by way of having our
moon at Earth's L1 is of course the primary goal and direct benefit,
whereas of my best swag thus far is suggesting that it'll essentially
cause a global insolation reduction of -22.5 watts/m2. According to
many others and the expertise of their global warming research, that
-22.5 w/m2 is capable of offering us a thermal offest of global
warming compensation worth better than three times the amount
estimated as in surplus or excess of energy that's supposedly
responsible for having created our environment's recent past, existing
and continually warming situation, and that's not looking good if you
happen to be made of ice or otherwise manage to survive best because
of snow and ice.
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Brad Guth
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