Hey Insane Curiosity Squad! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it with your friends or on other social networks like Facebook, Reddit Instagram, Tik Tok and Twitter, etc.. ( Since the algorithm is not cooperating in showing us to the public). In just 30 seconds, you will greatly help our Channel to grow and improve our future content. A big thank you from all of us.
I suspect rocky planets in the Goldilocks zone need mass, plate tectonics, a modest rotation rate, and a moon to maintain a life supporting climate. The moon probably plays a significant role in tectonics that keeps minerals and gases by recycling them.
Well, if one of the most famous papers ever published by NASA is called "Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus" is only natural that Mars has a pair and Venus doesn't.
@@sotsubreivaj considering the pair around mars are small and the one around Venus was described near the poles and a 1/4 the size. Sounds like Venus lost one prior to discovery
Yeah, it’s very likely Venus has had its share of temporary moons, just as Earth has. Quite recently, an asteroid crossing paths with us was caught in Earth orbit for about 56 days when it finally slipped away again to continue its own long, lonely trajectory around the sun on its own. Apparently we briefly capture such wanderers every so often and we’ve even noticed a few of them, though there have doubtlessly been plenty that zipped around us a few times and been flung away without being seen since they’re dim, tiny, and their orbits further away than our great big permanent moon. Certainly Venus and all the other planets must have had their share of temporary visiting moons, too, right?
It is possible that Venus did have one or several natural satellites at some point. These can since then gone rouge and drifted away, gotten too close and got broken up by tidal forces from Venus, briefly giving Venus a ring system. Or perhaps a moon was lost in an impact event contributing to Venus currently hostile state.
Hey Insane Curiosity Squad! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it with your friends or on other social networks like Facebook, Reddit Instagram, Tik Tok and Twitter, etc.. ( Since the algorithm is not cooperating in showing us to the public). In just 30 seconds, you will greatly help our Channel to grow and improve our future content. A big thank you from all of us.
If Venus ever had a moon, its name should be Cupid. He was her child and his fat6her was Mars. Or if Venus ever captures an asteroid... call it Cupid.
I suspect rocky planets in the Goldilocks zone need mass, plate tectonics, a modest rotation rate, and a moon to maintain a life supporting climate. The moon probably plays a significant role in tectonics that keeps minerals and gases by recycling them.
Well, if one of the most famous papers ever published by NASA is called "Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus" is only natural that Mars has a pair and Venus doesn't.
@@sotsubreivaj considering the pair around mars are small and the one around Venus was described near the poles and a 1/4 the size. Sounds like Venus lost one prior to discovery
Yeah, it’s very likely Venus has had its share of temporary moons, just as Earth has. Quite recently, an asteroid crossing paths with us was caught in Earth orbit for about 56 days when it finally slipped away again to continue its own long, lonely trajectory around the sun on its own. Apparently we briefly capture such wanderers every so often and we’ve even noticed a few of them, though there have doubtlessly been plenty that zipped around us a few times and been flung away without being seen since they’re dim, tiny, and their orbits further away than our great big permanent moon. Certainly Venus and all the other planets must have had their share of temporary visiting moons, too, right?
Could this explain the observations of Vulcan?
Zoozve: Now we know where Zuzu's petals went...
Everytime a bell rings, Venus gets a moon. 😏
To quote Mr. Spock - "Fascinating".
It is possible that Venus did have one or several natural satellites at some point. These can since then gone rouge and drifted away, gotten too close and got broken up by tidal forces from Venus, briefly giving Venus a ring system. Or perhaps a moon was lost in an impact event contributing to Venus currently hostile state.
That would help explain why the planet's rotation is so slow and in the opposite direction of other planets in the solar system.
Awesome I love this channel!!! So informative!
if Zoozve is a Moon, why does it have a Solar orbital path drawn for it?
It doesn't, it just happens to be drawn in a way that overlaps with the drawn orbital path for Earth.
Venus
Great video and amazing information !
"Zoozve" ... I absolutely love it when the names for celestial objects ... or really anything ... have crazy backstories!
So cool! Glad you liked it
And what did the guy who claimed to have observed Neith transiting The Sun see?
Maximillian Heil basically called out these follow the leader astronomers.
2002VE.
I swear to God, I work hard on my content, designs, time and effort, and in the end, there is no support😢😢😢
What happened?