What if ALL of the Moons Orbited Earth? The Earth With 18 Moons in Universe Sandbox²

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 255

  • @Sam-oz8pn
    @Sam-oz8pn 8 лет назад +87

    The fact that Triton and Phobos, the two moons destined to crash into their host planet, ended up the closest to Earth is disturbingly funny

    • @1wandersmann
      @1wandersmann 6 лет назад +9

      Haha yes. The universe has a cool humor

    • @MsMRkv
      @MsMRkv 5 лет назад

      Ikr 😂

  • @l.clevelandmajor9931
    @l.clevelandmajor9931 8 лет назад +33

    That was really interesting! All those moons were going crazy. In that first simulation I noted that Ganymede was picking up moons as its moons. I figure that Moons of significant size can have moons of their own. Would not be surprised to find that some in the Solar System actually do.

    • @Sam-oz8pn
      @Sam-oz8pn 8 лет назад +5

      L. Cleveland Major I think that Rhea has a moon. I also remember that a moon had rings, though I forgot which... it was a moon of Saturn, but not Titan. It's cool how the planet with the coolest rings has a moon with a moon and a moon with rings

    • @l.clevelandmajor9931
      @l.clevelandmajor9931 8 лет назад +4

      Ηι βγε I had not heard of Saturn having a moon that has rings, but an asteroid has been discovered that does have rings. I cannot recall the name of it off the top of my head, but it is atually true. It is said that the asteroid has two rings and I think 4 tiny moons.
      Isn't it amazing the times we live in, seeing all these awesome discoveries happening one right after another?

    • @Jacob-bi1oq
      @Jacob-bi1oq 8 лет назад

      R.I.P. Titan 2017

    • @papisuckmypoosay69
      @papisuckmypoosay69 7 лет назад +2

      Even a moon like Earth's might catch a small asteroid

    • @l.clevelandmajor9931
      @l.clevelandmajor9931 7 лет назад +2

      +pacific imperialist That's certainly true, and has been proven by what man has sent to orbit the Moon and gather data from it. In fact each successful Moon Landing in the Apollo missions had a coimmand module that remained in orbit around the Moon until the lander returned to it and redocked with it. Then they intiated a burn to begin the journey back to Earth. I was in school at that time in history, and it was fantastic to be able to watch the feed from those missions on TV. We even watched a lot of it in school, and then took tests that were about what we saw.
      Very exciting times we live in!

  • @AlexEvett55
    @AlexEvett55 8 лет назад +28

    You startled me at the beginning!
    lol

  • @Jmat-tc8zs
    @Jmat-tc8zs 8 лет назад +89

    What if you did the same simulation, but put all the moons at the the same distance from Earth as from the planet they actually orbit?

    • @Superman-av
      @Superman-av 7 лет назад +4

      what it all planets were one in the Goldilocks zone ??

    • @jacobspoloshion5441
      @jacobspoloshion5441 6 лет назад

      +अरुण विजयी hmmmm.... I think that would be weird very weird um they would probably crash into each other

    • @dexterricafort7403
      @dexterricafort7403 6 лет назад

      Jmat4102 l’l

    • @psyber649
      @psyber649 6 лет назад +5

      To be honest, just think about how far away some moons orbit. That’s fine with a gas giant like Jupiter but for Earth. They gonna go bye bye.

    • @srisrifamily2544
      @srisrifamily2544 2 года назад

      Then the moons would fly off because earth's gravity is not strong enough to pull the moons that are very far

  • @SCHenry1998
    @SCHenry1998 8 лет назад +40

    do another what if scenario if you doubled the mass of every thing in the solar system

  • @juno6994
    @juno6994 6 лет назад +4

    Glad to hear, that my favorite moon triton survived!

    • @fridayyy.2102
      @fridayyy.2102 5 лет назад

      Mercury and Triton shake hands and have a chat :D

  • @RadioactiveChannel06
    @RadioactiveChannel06 8 лет назад +25

    Carbohydrate ocean, love it.

  • @JettQuasar
    @JettQuasar 8 лет назад +36

    With so many large moons orbiting it wouldn't the Earth begin to wobble and cause tidal heating and massive volcanism?

    • @Sam-oz8pn
      @Sam-oz8pn 8 лет назад +20

      Jett Quasar probably, but even Ganymede is only twice as massive as our moon. They weren't too close either, maybe 3x closer with some of the larger moons but not more. It wouldn't be as bad as Io
      Our moon is pretty big. In fact, it's unusually large, extremely large for a planet the size of Earth. It's why life exists; scientists think that it's crucial for life to form and survive. It also explains how we just happen to have such a large moon. It's not that we're lucky, it's that as living creatures, we have to live on a rocky planet with large moon

    • @JettQuasar
      @JettQuasar 8 лет назад +4

      I just think that with a large number of close-in moons with highly elliptical orbits the tidal heating would prevent the Earth's continents from freezing over like what is shown at the end of the video (maybe not like Io but something more than what was shown).

    • @WistfuII
      @WistfuII 6 лет назад +1

      Also, I think that the Earth's rotation would be affected because of all the moons. It might actually be faster, maybe slower. ....This comment is a year late....

    • @hahatdog2546
      @hahatdog2546 6 лет назад

      They only wobble Earth's tilt axis. But still not enough mass for Earth to literally wobble or became a binary system. You have to combine all 18 major moons *9x*
      to get an earth size or mass celestial body.
      Hold my beer...

    • @Lumanova
      @Lumanova 6 лет назад +1

      He never really paid any attention to Earth, just the moons.

  • @EdMcStinko
    @EdMcStinko 8 лет назад +4

    Not bad Anton! Excellent idea, although I think that with the proper arrangement you might be able to keep all of them intact while orbiting Earth.

  • @sciencethygod
    @sciencethygod 8 лет назад +11

    You forgot to say welcome to what da math :(
    Interesting outcome though!

  • @27EeYOrE10
    @27EeYOrE10 7 лет назад +4

    Titania is the Wife of the Elf King Oberon in the Play " A Midsummer Nights Dream", but the Origin of both Characters dates way back to ancient germans.
    So yeah no relation there whatsoever

  • @NormalChannel95
    @NormalChannel95 5 лет назад +6

    Jupiter and Saturn: Take care of our biggest moons will ya?
    Earth: ok....
    *Later* .....
    0:00

  • @willflynn7384
    @willflynn7384 6 лет назад +1

    Wow you almost forgot my fav moon Titan!!! Love that moon!

  • @jasontoddman7265
    @jasontoddman7265 8 лет назад +5

    Could you make a video showing what climate changes would happen if the Earth's orbit became circular and set at different distances from the sun? Perhaps you could do this to determine what would be the absolute optimum orbital distance from the sun for life on Earth now and at several different times in the distant future?

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 6 лет назад +4

    What would happen to the solar system, if all the planets with moons disappeared, yet their moons remained? Where would they go without their parent planet reigning them in? So all the moons of Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, set free to roam the solar system. Would any of them escape or fall in towards the sun, or maintain their parent planet's orbital areas?

    • @obsidiancoppersunstones3479
      @obsidiancoppersunstones3479 6 лет назад +1

      Some of them just might have their own orbit around the Sun and could be conceived as planets. Most would leave the Solar System and become rogue planets.

  • @tymagaidash7013
    @tymagaidash7013 7 лет назад +2

    Charon? Replace with proteus with it?

  • @LNERStudios
    @LNERStudios 2 месяца назад

    anton: i’m making every major moon orbit earth
    charon:am i a joke to you

  • @kordellcurl7559
    @kordellcurl7559 8 лет назад +9

    Phobos and Deimos are not even big enough to call major moons. Charon is a lot bigger than those 2 moons. So why are Phobos and Deimos are on the list.

    • @carschmn
      @carschmn 6 лет назад +3

      kordell curl because he thought people should know about them.

    • @sachinsuresh7233
      @sachinsuresh7233 6 лет назад

      Because "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself"

  • @kojirourayleighgalang9319
    @kojirourayleighgalang9319 8 лет назад +6

    Enceladus just looks like a magnetic field! :-)

  • @Sam-oz8pn
    @Sam-oz8pn 8 лет назад +10

    The reason the moons left Earth in the first simulation was because they were outside of Earth's hill sphere.

  • @propaneaeroplane
    @propaneaeroplane 6 лет назад +2

    YOU FORGOT PLUTOS MOON CHARON

  • @wiseygames3340
    @wiseygames3340 8 лет назад

    I would've expected tidal heating to get the best of it, I was wrong. Great video.

  • @johnnysheen9615
    @johnnysheen9615 6 лет назад +1

    Earth would likely loose it`s land animals, the tidal effects of such a system would be nuts.

  • @LordofStarsChannel
    @LordofStarsChannel 8 лет назад

    I remember when you had 10k subs :3 keep making these videos!

  • @psyclonetheseahawk9261
    @psyclonetheseahawk9261 8 лет назад +34

    He should've put them at the distance that they actually orbit :/

    • @exploretalentincorporated9284
      @exploretalentincorporated9284 7 лет назад +1

      Psyclone The Seahawk Jupiter sux

    • @mattevans1643
      @mattevans1643 5 лет назад

      The distance they orbit, thier host planet is much farther that the earth's gravitational force, it wouldn't work.

    • @johnballs1352
      @johnballs1352 5 лет назад

      @@exploretalentincorporated9284 nothing is stupider than jupiter

    • @GoldballIndustries
      @GoldballIndustries 3 года назад

      @Lucas Silva its also likely those lost moons would meet back up eith the earth in less than 100 years and destroy all life

    • @pauldavis5665
      @pauldavis5665 2 года назад

      Would be too far away for Earth to be able to keep them in orbit so he had to make them closer. Earth's gravitational field is not as strong and far reaching as the gas giant planets.

  • @ailtonferreira1708
    @ailtonferreira1708 8 лет назад

    Another great video!

  • @giovanni_vaz_cardoso
    @giovanni_vaz_cardoso 2 года назад

    You could have added Nereid (Neptune) and Hyperion and Phoebe (Saturn) as well, they're not round (but then again so isn't Proteus, it just happens to be the largest non round moon and largest than the smallest round moon Mimas), but they're also major moons since they have a diameter greater than 200km.

  • @PTSDSquirrel
    @PTSDSquirrel 8 лет назад +1

    This does bring up a good question. How many moons is an Earth like object able to sustain in a stable orbit

  • @leventunlimited5955
    @leventunlimited5955 7 лет назад +4

    Nice video

  • @gurnoorsingh6799
    @gurnoorsingh6799 8 лет назад +1

    why didn't you add Pluto's moons and eris moon and orcus moon

  • @enkiimuto1041
    @enkiimuto1041 7 лет назад +1

    I was looking for such video, THANKS!
    Would like to know more about the effects of icy moons on habitable zone as they don't hold atmosphere, though.

  • @lionelmessi5110
    @lionelmessi5110 6 лет назад

    Satellites: Crash party!
    Planet: Even you crash on me, im still safe.

  • @SuperKeith00
    @SuperKeith00 6 лет назад

    I'd like to see you do a video where Earth is in every planetary orbit. In place of each planet. How Earth is different in each area of the solar system?

  • @tomsullivan47
    @tomsullivan47 6 лет назад +1

    +Anton Petrov What about Charon? Charon's a major moon.

  • @mrtheman3949
    @mrtheman3949 8 лет назад

    I actually found out that it's highly unlikely the both of Mars' moons were captured asteroids. Their orbits are highly circular and orbit relatively close to Mars' equatorial plain. There was a theory that they're the result of an ejecta plume off an impact on Mars' equator, but who knows.

  • @LuigiGodzillaGirl
    @LuigiGodzillaGirl 8 лет назад +1

    Not sure if this question has been answered yet, but is it possible for a moon to have its own moon orbting around it? If so, what would it be called?

    • @MedK001
      @MedK001 7 лет назад

      LuigiGodzillaGirl Yes, it is. it would be called a moon of a moon or something like that.

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 6 лет назад

      A satellite. Just like our Moon is a satellite of Earth.

  • @littledidio99
    @littledidio99 8 лет назад +10

    It would be interesting if our earth was a super earth and we had mars as a moon to us and make it half the distance that the moon is to our moon. Then make our moon bigger. Can that system actually work?.

    • @aomafura3374
      @aomafura3374 7 лет назад

      Would earth still be habitable? What about the sea level?

    • @SouthwesternEagle
      @SouthwesternEagle 7 лет назад +1

      Our gravity is already too strong here on Earth (just a 2m fall can kill you if you hit your head)! We don't need to have >2g on a larger planet. We have to be careful which planet we call home in the future.

    • @waffleweirdo1252
      @waffleweirdo1252 7 лет назад

      The moon system might, but life won't.

    • @GoldballIndustries
      @GoldballIndustries 3 года назад

      the composition of layering coukd also be the same, if the iron core is the same size, gravity would feel much weaker because the surface is much farther away from said core, saying the mantle eill fill in the extra space if ee dint touch the cores, and the crust.
      if we scale it right we can hwve a suoer ewrth that is hwbitable

    • @GoldballIndustries
      @GoldballIndustries 3 года назад

      I can make a diagram of this in sfs. by adding 2x the radius to the earth and half the distance for the moon but its also mars

  • @cypherbrittainnethegodofsl4988
    @cypherbrittainnethegodofsl4988 7 лет назад +1

    Earth
    Satelite:
    Phobos
    Triton
    Io
    Ganymede
    Luna
    Proteus
    Enceladus

  • @charualtekar2120
    @charualtekar2120 5 лет назад

    I like your videos. Did you cover anything on the bootes void?

  • @LegatusLucius1994
    @LegatusLucius1994 6 лет назад

    You should put something in there so that way we can see what's going on like a star but have its gravitational pull shut off so that way we can at least see the planets and them spinning

  • @a_guy_in_a_place4596
    @a_guy_in_a_place4596 7 лет назад +1

    What is he using

  • @MashupsByMandy
    @MashupsByMandy 8 лет назад +8

    I wonder how Triton in that orbit at the end would look like for someone just living their life on earth.

    • @MashupsByMandy
      @MashupsByMandy 8 лет назад +1

      *****
      but that would be fine since we wouldn't have built cities on the coasts, and a giant moon in the sky, it would look great.

  • @uzhasair
    @uzhasair 7 лет назад +1

    u forgot Charon why?

  • @knightofpower3093
    @knightofpower3093 7 лет назад +1

    What about doing, "What if all dwarf planets orbited the earth?"

  • @jeffreynelson2660
    @jeffreynelson2660 8 лет назад +7

    So, what would that do to the ocean tides?

    • @gauthamarun3878
      @gauthamarun3878 7 лет назад +4

      Jeffrey Nelson Well, everything will die from huge tsunamis, but if you are a surfer who survived, you will get "mad waves bruh!"

    • @AmaryInkawult
      @AmaryInkawult 7 лет назад

      Karate Man beautiful chaos

    • @hahatdog2546
      @hahatdog2546 6 лет назад

      @@gauthamarun3878 Moons with oceans could suffer worse than earth. As they have lower gravity to pull the water...

  • @Nikoli492
    @Nikoli492 8 лет назад +1

    Can you prove if our solar system from Sagittarius Galaxy?

  • @Dougie05
    @Dougie05 7 лет назад +1

    Titan is the eight best moon that could support life Ganymede is second triton is seventh and even Charon to are more habitable than titian

  • @brianromine2281
    @brianromine2281 6 лет назад +2

    it looked like a race

  • @buspsychologist9640
    @buspsychologist9640 7 лет назад

    whats the name of the intro song?

  • @maxresdefault3691
    @maxresdefault3691 6 лет назад

    damn, is there any scenario you haven't covered? this is great!

  • @KnightRanger38
    @KnightRanger38 7 лет назад

    Looking at some of the other continents my guess its that there was a sea level increase and not an impact crater in the amazon basin in South America.

  • @MilesMolasses
    @MilesMolasses 6 лет назад

    Whats the name of your intro theme?

  • @metleon
    @metleon 7 лет назад

    "It's made of carbohydrates."
    Is there sugar in this game? If so, you should place enough sugar cubes to make a planet.

  • @johnnysheen9615
    @johnnysheen9615 6 лет назад

    Glad to hear, that you have adopted the same terminology I have. Coming to the same conclusions.
    I think Mars moons should be called minor moons or just natural satellites. Same with the other none spherical bodies.

  • @tranzitsinvancouver6745
    @tranzitsinvancouver6745 7 лет назад

    Is there other moon with atmosphere?

  • @kojirourayleighgalang9319
    @kojirourayleighgalang9319 8 лет назад +2

    I found a amazing thing!
    Orbit of Proteus and .....

  • @pcheintz7264
    @pcheintz7264 3 года назад

    Have you considered a more realistic scenario?/ What I mean, is if we presume we would have the ability to move moons and even dwarf planets, and large asteroids, say like they would in star trek with tractor beams,,, what if we altered the solar system in our favor, but in a more balanced way? One scenario I considered was taking the largest 184 non-planetary objects and placing them as moons around the 8 planets, with one moon per rocky planet, and 45 moons per gas/ice giant fixing the orbits of Mercury and Venus while at it (getting rid of existing minor moons that did not fall into the largest 184 objects):
    - To move to Mercury (correct Distance from sun 67mil mi, Rotation period 48h, Eccentricity 0d, Inclination 0d, Axial Tilt 23.5d)
    + Orcus 917 (DPC)
    - To move to Venus (correct Rotation period 48h, Eccentricity 0d, Inclination 0d, Axial Tilt 23.5d, atmosphere clearout)
    + Eris 2326 (DP)
    - To move to Mars (correct Distance from sun 190mil mi, Rotation period 24h, Eccentricity 0d, Inclination 0d, Axial Tilt 23.5d)
    + Ceres 939 (DP)
    - To move to Jupiter
    - IO 1815 (Moon-Jupiter)
    - Europa 1569 (Moon-Jupiter)
    - Ganymede 2634 (Moon-Jupiter)
    - Callisto 2410 (Moon-Jupiter)
    + Ixion 617 (PDPC)
    + 2010 RF43 615 (PDPC)
    + 2010 JO179 574 (PDPC)
    + 2010 KZ39 574 (PDPC)
    + 2013 FZ27 561 (PDPC)
    + 2010 FX86 549 (PDPC)
    + Vesta 525 (Asteroid)
    + 2014 BV64 513 (PDPC)
    + 2015 BZ518 513 (PDPC)
    + Pallas 512 (Asteroid)
    + 2002 TC302 504 (PDPC)
    + 2010 VK201 501 (PDPC)
    + 2003 QX113 490 (PDPC)
    + 2014 FT71 490 (PDPC)
    + 2014 BZ57 479 (PDPC)
    + 2004 PF115 468 (PDPC)
    + 2003 FY128 460 (PDPC)
    + 2010 RF64 457 (PDPC)
    + 2011 OA60 457 (PDPC)
    + 1996 GQ21 456 (PDPC)
    + 2014 SH349 447 (PDPC)
    + 2014 XS40 447 (PDPC)
    + 2011 GM27 447 (PDPC)
    + 2000 YW134 437 (PDPC)
    + 2004 NT33 423 (PDPC)
    + 2002 GJ32 416 (PDPC)
    + 2001 QF298 408 (PDPC)
    + Interamnia 332 (Asteroid)
    + Chariklo 260 (Centaur)
    + Cybele 236 (Asteroid)
    + Herculina 222 (Asteroid)
    + Psyche 222 (Asteroid)
    + Bamberga 220 (Asteroid)
    + Chiron 216 (Centaur)
    + Doris 216 (Asteroid)
    + Egeria 214 (Asteroid)
    + Iris 214 (Asteroid)
    + S/2012 212 (Moon-Huya)
    + Camilla 210 (Asteroid)
    + Bienor 207 (Centaur)
    + Fortuna 206 (Asteroid)
    - To move to Saturn
    - Mimas 198 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Enceladas 252 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Tethys 533 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Dione 561 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Rhea 764 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Titan 2576 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Hyperion 276 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Iapetus 735 (Moon-Saturn)
    - Phoebe 212 (Moon-Saturn)
    + Sedna 995 (DPC)
    + Salacia 846 (DPC)
    + Varda 746 (PDPC)
    + Dysnomia 700 (Moon-Eris)
    + 2002 UX25 665 (PDPC)
    + G!k£n?'h•md¡m… 655 (PDPC)
    + 2014 EZ51 626 (PDPC)
    + Chaos 600 (PDPC)
    + 2015 KH162 587 (PDPC)
    + 2002 XW93 565 (PDPC)
    + 2010 RE64 561 (PDPC)
    + 2008 ST291 549 (PDPC)
    + 2014 YA50 536 (PDPC)
    + 2015 BP519 524 (PDPC)
    + 2014 FC72 513 (PDPC)
    + 2004 TY364 512 (PDPC)
    + 2010 TQ182 509 (PDPC)
    + 2013 AT183 501 (PDPC)
    + 2003 UA414 490 (PDPC)
    + 2008 OG19 490 (PDPC)
    + 2014 UM33 490 (PDPC)
    + 2014 HZ199 479 (PDPC)
    + 2010 RF188 468 (PDPC)
    + 2014 JR80 468 (PDPC)
    + 2010 ER65 457 (PDPC)
    + 2010 RO64 457 (PDPC)
    + 2014 OJ394 457 (PDPC)
    + 2002 KX14 455 (PDPC)
    + 2013 HV156 447 (PDPC)
    + 2013 SF106 443 (PDPC)
    + Vanth 442 (Moon-Orcus)
    + Dziewanna 433 (PDPC)
    + 2002 JR146 423 (PDPC)
    + Ilmar‰ 332 (Moon-Varda)
    + Europa 304 (Asteroid)
    + Eugenia 202 (Asteroid)
    - To move to Uranus
    - Miranda 235 (Moon-Uranus)
    - Ariel 578 (Moon-Uranus)
    - Umbriel 584 (Moon-Uranus)
    - Titania 788 (Moon-Uranus)
    - Oberon 761 (Moon-Uranus)
    - Puck 162 (Moon-Uranus)
    + Haumea 1560 (DP)
    + Makemake 1430 (DP)
    + Quaoar 1110 (DPC)
    + 2002 AW197 768 (PDPC)
    + 2013 FY27 740 (PDPC)
    + 2005 RN43 679 (PDPC)
    + 2018 VG18 656 (PDPC)
    + 2003 UZ413 650 (PDPC)
    + 2015 RR245 626 (PDPC)
    + 2005 QU182 584 (PDPC)
    + 2014 WK509 574 (PDPC)
    + 2004 XR190 561 (PDPC)
    + 2002 XV93 549 (PDPC)
    + 2006 QH181 536 (PDPC)
    + 2017 OF69 533 (PDPC)
    + 2007 XV50 524 (PDPC)
    + 2007 JH43 513 (PDPC)
    + 2014 HA200 513 (PDPC)
    + 2005 TB190 507 (PDPC)
    + 2014 FC69 501 (PDPC)
    + 2008 AP129 490 (PDPC)
    + 2014 VU37 479 (PDPC)
    + 2014 JP80 468 (PDPC)
    + 2011 WJ157 468 (PDPC)
    + 2014 US224 468 (PDPC)
    + 2014 XR40 457 (PDPC)
    + 2014 QW441 457 (PDPC)
    + 2002 VR128 449 (PDPC)
    + 2014 XY40 447 (PDPC)
    + 2015 AH281 447 (PDPC)
    + 2010 HE79 447 (PDPC)
    + 2010 EL139 447 (PDPC)
    + 2014 CO23 447 (PDPC)
    + Hygiea 434 (Asteroid)
    + 1993 SC 332 (PDPC)
    + Euphrosyne 268 (Asteroid)
    + Eunomia 256 (Asteroid)
    + Hektor 250 (Trojan)
    + Ceto 222 (Centaur)
    - To move to Neptune
    - Nereid 356 (Moon-Neptune)
    - Proteus 424 (Moon-Neptune)
    - Triton 1353 (Moon-Neptune)
    + 2007 RW10 247 (Moon-Neptune)
    + Pluto 2376 (DP)
    + Gonggong 1230 (DPC)
    + Charon 1212 (Moon-Pluto)
    + 2002 MS4 778 (PDPC)
    + 2003 AZ84 707 (PDPC)
    + 2004 GV9 680 (PDPC)
    + Varuna 654 (PDPC)
    + 2014 UZ224 635 (PDPC)
    + 2012 VP113 574 (PDPC)
    + 2014 AN55 561 (PDPC)
    + 2003 VS2 548 (PDPC)
    + 2005 RM43 524 (PDPC)
    + 2013 XC26 524 (PDPC)
    + 2007 JJ43 513 (PDPC)
    + 2014 WP509 513 (PDPC)
    + 2010 OO127 501 (PDPC)
    + 2014 TZ85 501 (PDPC)
    + 2005 UQ513 498 (PDPC)
    + 2010 DN93 490 (PDPC)
    + 1995 TL8 479 (PDPC)
    + 2015 AM281 479 (PDPC)
    + 2013 FS28 468 (PDPC)
    + 2014 WH509 468 (PDPC)
    + 2015 AJ281 468 (PDPC)
    + 2010 TJ 457 (PDPC)
    + 2010 VZ98 457 (PDPC)
    + 2014 AM55 457 (PDPC)
    + 2014 DN143 447 (PDPC)
    + 2014 FY71 447 (PDPC)
    + 2010 ET65 447 (PDPC)
    + Huya 406 (PDPC)
    + 2012 VB116 404 (PDPC)
    + 2003 QW90 401 (PDPC)
    + 2004 PT107 400 (PDPC)
    + Hiiaka 320 (Moon-Haumea)
    + Davida 290 (Asteroid)
    + Sylvia 286 (Asteroid)
    + Actaea 284 (Moon-Salacia)
    + Juno 246 (Asteroid)
    + Patientia 226 (Asteroid)
    + 2015 TG387 220 (PDPC)

  • @ernstboyd8745
    @ernstboyd8745 5 лет назад

    WOULDNT THE SOME OF THE COLLISIONS MAKE RINGS?

  • @randonautical3363
    @randonautical3363 6 лет назад

    Maybe try positioning the moons w/ the same distance as our moon or the distance it has for their original host planet

  • @DataStorm1
    @DataStorm1 7 лет назад

    That many large moons would also churn up our planet's lava, basically heating up the earth core.

  • @UnknownchannelI
    @UnknownchannelI Год назад +1

    What da math?

  • @malcolmhardwick4258
    @malcolmhardwick4258 5 лет назад

    Would be interesting to see what was going on on planet earth. Tides etc

  • @ghostboogie62
    @ghostboogie62 3 года назад

    Earths moon was jealous but decided to stay

  • @universalsojourn7775
    @universalsojourn7775 7 лет назад

    Can you do a video if Ganymede be in a stable orbit around earth.

  • @lordluxembourg68
    @lordluxembourg68 5 лет назад +1

    Titan Was eaten not kicked out but why, it wasn't by ganymede

  • @Michaelmorris399
    @Michaelmorris399 7 лет назад

    what is the name of this game/simulation

    • @PhoenixKoopion
      @PhoenixKoopion 6 лет назад

      michael morris universe sandbox 2 or squared

  • @2nsspa40
    @2nsspa40 6 лет назад +1

    Why did not gravity pull the moons in

  • @ezioauditore3294
    @ezioauditore3294 7 лет назад

    Charon?
    Nix?
    Hydra??

  • @markwalker9107
    @markwalker9107 6 лет назад

    Have you ever moved Venus to wear Earth is and see what would happen?

  • @radhakishanrajput7858
    @radhakishanrajput7858 6 лет назад

    tethys did not collide with something it passed really close to ganymede and got ripped off

  • @thepersonone134
    @thepersonone134 6 лет назад

    Why not Charon

  • @logical-functionsmodel9364
    @logical-functionsmodel9364 8 лет назад

    7:35
    Did your math correctly?
    What Da Math!?!?
    :P

  • @kojirourayleighgalang9319
    @kojirourayleighgalang9319 7 лет назад +2

    Did I see earth turn into a ocean on the beginning

  • @st-_-ahp226
    @st-_-ahp226 7 лет назад

    i feel like your the only one on youtube who uses this simulator correctly everyone els just shoots like teapots at things....

    • @PhoenixKoopion
      @PhoenixKoopion 6 лет назад

      St-_-ahp totally not a jacksepticeye reference

  • @GoldballIndustries
    @GoldballIndustries 3 года назад

    shoukd try to have all planets orbit eachither, dont forget my fsvorite planet venus, theres something interesting about terrestrial planets with huge thicker stmospheres, and venus fits that bill

  • @Pandadude-eg9li
    @Pandadude-eg9li 5 лет назад

    16:15 That is what happened to Titan.

  • @Renne78
    @Renne78 7 лет назад

    We just get a higher surface temperature with much higher sea levels (maybe of +200m).

  • @MegaRyuki
    @MegaRyuki 8 лет назад

    Wow thats a lot of moons, like very very very much

  • @lordluxembourg68
    @lordluxembourg68 5 лет назад +2

    How could you, you forgot charon!

  • @ganaraminukshuk0
    @ganaraminukshuk0 8 лет назад

    Prediction: most of the moons combine into a single moon, while the rest get flung out or combine with the earth. The resulting moon is roughly the size of Mars and has a small amount of water on it.

  • @minhnguyn3105
    @minhnguyn3105 4 года назад

    Me:looking up at the sky see a solar eclipse
    5minute later
    Sees another one
    Another 10 minute ,sees a lunar eclipse

    • @minhnguyn3105
      @minhnguyn3105 4 года назад

      Sees 5 lunar eclipse at the same time and 3 solar eclipse after

  • @Ficii1
    @Ficii1 8 лет назад +4

    Planets are named after Roman mythology and moons are named after Greek mythology.

    • @zakidaddy
      @zakidaddy 8 лет назад +1

      Fici wow, never knowed this. Thanks!

    • @Ficii1
      @Ficii1 8 лет назад

      Who?

    • @AmaryInkawult
      @AmaryInkawult 7 лет назад

      Claude-Achille Debussy yup, Roman and Greek gods were the same, just named differently

    • @flamingrubys11
      @flamingrubys11 7 лет назад +1

      but the romans did have a few differences and even their own gods

    • @waffleweirdo1252
      @waffleweirdo1252 7 лет назад +1

      But Uranus is a Greek god

  • @StreetSpirit135
    @StreetSpirit135 5 лет назад

    Oberon and Titania are named after the King and Queen of the Fairies

  • @TheLostOne172
    @TheLostOne172 7 лет назад

    I think the temperature will drop unless the moons all crash.

  • @GrEyPrEiSt
    @GrEyPrEiSt 6 лет назад

    The names of the moons of Uranus are named after characters from A Midsummer nights dream

  • @mrexists5400
    @mrexists5400 7 лет назад

    10:41 nothing interesting happening as several moons are being torn up by earth

  • @bmkreher888
    @bmkreher888 7 лет назад

    It didn’t titan has a reverse green house effect

  • @bloxindoez3718
    @bloxindoez3718 6 лет назад

    "Methane and Carbohydrates" me no need dem Carbs BOI

  • @kojirourayleighgalang9319
    @kojirourayleighgalang9319 8 лет назад +2

    I detected the moon from the sky! it was crashing on S.A.!

  • @FaunOfTheDevil
    @FaunOfTheDevil 8 лет назад

    Jupiter's moons go Io Europa Ganymede Callisto, not Io Ganymede Callisto Europa. Rad video though! My favorite moon is Io.

  • @Sagitarria
    @Sagitarria 7 лет назад

    that wasn't a collision with south america- that's the amazon basin.

  • @christmassnow3465
    @christmassnow3465 6 лет назад

    Can you make Deimos or Phobos orbit our own moon instead?

  • @salty4382
    @salty4382 6 лет назад

    Well, then "What's the time?" is a hard question.

  • @evangelos9660
    @evangelos9660 6 лет назад

    Instead of the two tiny asteroids you should have put Charon & Dysnomia.

  • @clashofclans1465
    @clashofclans1465 6 лет назад

    Video ends at 0:20

  • @szigethimerse4611
    @szigethimerse4611 8 лет назад +3

    South America doesen't look so bad compared to Europe though.

    • @weppything5710
      @weppything5710 7 лет назад

      Chozo Ascendant SOUTH AMERICA BRAZIL HUE HUE

  • @tonyengardio8413
    @tonyengardio8413 7 лет назад

    "and anyway" Anton Petrov

  • @vickylai535
    @vickylai535 6 лет назад

    Why Earth is have 150 moons ago

  • @carschmn
    @carschmn 6 лет назад

    The ice moons might be habitable if they could survive around earth.

  • @allanpatterson7653
    @allanpatterson7653 5 лет назад

    The tides would be a little different