• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Why Doesn’t Venus Have Its Own Moon?

September 3, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Venus and our closest neighbor Mercury (here’s how that works) are lonely. While Jupiter hogs up at least 95 moons, neither of the innermost planets have a single moon to keep them company in their orbits of the Sun.

Advertisement

Mercury is likely too close to the Sun to hold onto a moon, with any potential moon more likely to crash into Mercury or quickly be pulled out of orbit by the Sun. But it’s a little more of a question as to why Venus captured no moon, or whether it did have a moon at some point before losing it.

Moons can be formed in three ways that we know of. One is capture, which is how scientists believe Neptune came to have its largest moon, Triton.

“[Triton] has a very strange orbit, which led us to hypothesize that it was actually a dwarf planet from the Kuiper Belt, just like Pluto,” NASA planetary scientist Joe Renaud explains in a video. “One day it got too close to Neptune and was captured by Neptune’s gravity.”

Another way is co-formation, where the planet and moon are formed at the same time.

“The Galilean moons of Jupiter are thought to have formed from a giant disk of debris that Jupiter pulled in from the gas and dust that orbited the Sun in the early history of the Solar System,” Renaud added. “The material in that disk would also form those same moonlets that eventually came together to make up the four largest moons of Jupiter: IO, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.”

Advertisement

Then there are cataclysmic collisions. The Earth’s Moon was first created 4.5 billion years ago, likely in a collision between planet Theia and Earth which threw off enough material to form it. 



Venus, having about 80 percent of the mass of Earth, you might expect to be able to hold onto a moon created by this last method or by co-formation, and it is unclear how Venus would escape from the chaos of the early Solar System.

“Given current theories of Solar System formation, it is unlikely that Venus would have avoided such a large collision,” one team looking at the topic, and trying to explain Venus’s strange rotation, wrote. “Simulations suggest that most large collisions create a disk from which a moon forms. Moreover, the natural outcome is one where the sense of orbital motion and planetary spin are the same, leading to outward tidal evolution.”

The prevailing hypothesis for why Venus has no moon is that it is simply too close to the Sun to hold onto one. However, it has been proposed that Venus was impacted in the early Solar System and the debris would have formed a moon. The moon would have sat in orbit with Venus for a time, slowly spiraling away from it. According to the team, a second impact event could have reversed the spin of Venus, which then sent the moon back down to Venus via tidal forces.

Advertisement



While this might explain Venus’s bizarre spin – being the only planet to spin clockwise, though Uranus does tilt – it’s still far from clear that Venus did have a moon. Further observations of the planet may reveal more in the future, hopefully when NASA’s planned Veritas mission visits the planet in the 2030s.

And don’t feel too bad for Venus, it does have a quasi-moon.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Lithuania to fence first 110 km of Belarus border by April
  2. China’s ICBC to restrict some forex and commodities trading
  3. Why Is Earth’s Inner Core Solid When It’s Hotter Than The Sun’s Surface?
  4. Dark Energy May Be Getting Diluted As The Universe Expands

Source Link: Why Doesn't Venus Have Its Own Moon?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • World’s Oldest Pachycephalosaur Fossil Pushes Back These Dinosaurs’ Emergence By 15 Million Years
  • The Hole In The Ozone Layer Is Healing And On Track For Full Recovery In The 21st Century, Thanks To Science
  • First Sweet Potato Genome Reveals They’re Hybrids With A Puzzling Past And 6 Sets Of Chromosomes
  • Why Is The Top Of Canada So Sparsely Populated? Meet The “Canadian Shield”
  • Humans Are In The Middle Of “A Great Evolutionary Transition”, New Paper Claims
  • Why Do Some Toilets Have Two Flush Buttons?
  • 130-Year-Old Butter Additive Discovered In Danish Basement Contains Bacteria From The 1890s
  • Prehistoric Humans Made Necklaces From Marine Mollusk Fossils 20,000 Years Ago
  • Zond 5: In 1968 Two Soviet Steppe Tortoises Beat Humans To Orbiting Around The Moon
  • Why Cats Adapted This Defense Mechanism From Snakes
  • Mother Orca Seen Carrying Dead Calf Once Again On Washington Coast
  • A Busy Spider Season Is Brewing: Why This Fall Could See A Boom Of Arachnid Activity
  • What Alternatives Are There To The Big Bang Model?
  • Magnetic Flip Seen Around First Photographed Black Hole Pushes “Models To The Limit”
  • Something Out Of Nothing: New Approach Mimics Matter Creation Using Superfluid Helium
  • Surströmming: Why Sweden’s Stinky Fermented Fish Smells So Bad (But People Still Eat It)
  • First-Ever Recording Of Black Hole Recoil Captured During Merger – And You Can Listen To It
  • The Moon Is Moving Away From Earth At A Rate Of About 3.8 Centimeters Per Year. Will It Ever Drift Apart?
  • As Solar Storm Hits Earth NASA Finds “The Sun Is Slowly Waking Up”
  • Plate Tectonics And CO2 On Planets Suggest Alien Civilizations “Are Probably Pretty Rare”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version