A crash of planetary proportions
by Ryu Connor — 1:06 AM on August 17, 2001

Discovery News is reporting that the Southwest Research Institute and the University of California-Berkeley have devised a computer model that explains how the moon formed and how Luna's subsequent relationship to Earth has changed the planet's rotation into a twenty-four hour day. While the theory that the Earth and Luna were formed from a planetary collision isn't altogether new, previous attempts to field models that would eventually mimic the current relationship between the two failed. While this success doesn't empirically prove this model is what happened, it does increase the probability that this theory is the correct one.

The new research, presented in the current edition of the journal Nature, postulates an enormously energetic but oblique crash between Earth and a planet the size of Mars, which is about half Earth's size.

The energy unleashed by this collision some 4.5 billion years ago would have been enough to destroy the incoming planet and melt Earth all the way through, Canup said. There would also have been some vaporized rock debris kicked up from the crash, which would start orbiting Earth.

"Once the orbiting debris cooled, it's from that stuff that the moon then coalesced," Canup said. The whole process, from collision to formation of the moon, took less than 100 years, she said — an almost inconceivably short time in planetary terms.

Must have been one hell of a light show. Thanks to Alindrea for the heads up.

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