On the expanding earth and shrinking moon
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Scientific Research Publishing Inc
Abstract
Exactly 101 years ago, German scientist Alfred Lothar Wegener, sailed against the prevailing wisdom
of his day when he posited that not only have the Earth’s continental plates receded from
each other over the course of the Earth’s history, but that they are currently in a state of motion
relative to one another. To explain this, Wegener set forth the hypothesis that the Earth must be
expanding as a whole. Wegener’s inability to provide an adequate explanation of the forces and
energy source responsible for continental drift and the prevailing belief that the Earth was a rigid
solid body resulted in the acrimonious dismissal of his theories. Today, that the continents are
generally receding from each other is no longer a point of debate but a sacrosanct pillar of modern
geology and geophysics. What is debatable is the energy source driving this phenomenon. Herein,
we hold that continental drift is a result of the Earth undergoing a secular radial expansion. An
expanding Earth hypothesis is currently an idea that is not accepted on a general consensus level.
Be that as it may, we show herein that the law of conversation of angular momentum and energy
entail that the Earth must not only expand as a consequence of the secular recession of the Earth-
Moon system from the Sun, but invariably, that the Moon must contract as well. As a result, the
much sort for energy source driving plate tectonics can (hypothetically) be identified with the
energy transfers occurring between the orbital and rotational kinetic energy of the Earth. If our
calculations are to be believed—as we do; then, the Earth must be expanding radially at a paltry
rate of about +1.50 mm/yr while the Moon is contracting radially at a relatively high rate of about
−410 mm/yr.
Description
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY).
Citation
Nyambuya G.G. (2014). On the expanding earth and shrinking moon. International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics.