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JRS: In article , dated
Sun, 2 Apr 2006 18:55:41 remote, seen in news:uk.sci.astronomy, Hayley posted : the amazing coincidence that the moon is exactly the right size to exactly cover the sun about 6 times a decade to give us a spectacular eclipse seems almost to much to believe that it really is a coincidence, but I cant think of anything in the evolution of the planets and the creation of our moon to suggest otherwise Since the Moon's distance is steadily changing on a moderate astronomical time-scale, there can be no astronomical reason for the Moon being now a particular angular size. On the other hand, therefore, the coincidence is that a more-or-less intelligent race has evolved at the right time to see it. That's not inevitably a complete coincidence. If the Moon were visibly much larger, then the tides would make the shore-line a permanent disaster area, which could prevent life moving from sea to land. (If the Moon were much smaller, there would still be the solar tides, which are of similar magnitude.) If the Sun was of different absolute size, it would be of different absolute brightness, and the zone where water is liquid would be at a different distance. That would affect the solar tide, and so might have significance. All hypothetical. -- © John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v4.00 MIME. © Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms & links; Astro stuff via astron-1.htm, gravity0.htm ; quotings.htm, pascal.htm, etc. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
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