hahahahahahahaa
^^^you shoulda said it more dramatic like...SPACE!
style your an idiot evaporated particles are forced to compression by gravity
lol i was slippin, i should have posted this...
gravity in a debris field? think about what you are saying.
you have a hi temp cloud of debris. the excited molecules would be ejected
similar to the tail of a comet. possibly even trapped by earths gravity.
why don't comets build like a snowball as they eject gas and ice?
...yeah i thought so.
Well the moon does have an atmosphere, not even a drop in the bucket compared to Earth or Venus but a very small, mirco-dynamical one. Scientists always compare the moon to Mercury. The temperature variations close to the moon's surface as well as its V-escape (probably around 2km/s) may not necessarily make heavier gas particles a 'blow off' if the area has many days of constant sun like Mercury. Over billions of years it could be possible.
Oh snap yo, shit is gettin' real
Shit is gettin' real.
Shit is gettin' real nerdy up in hmyeah.
if that wasn't the case all the stars would not be there and asteroids would fall apart
Here you fucking idiots
Water vapour has been detected by Chandrayaan-1 and found to vary with latitude, with a maximum at ~60–70 degrees; it is possibly generated from the sublimation of water ice in the regolith. These gases can either return into the regolith due to the Moon's gravity, or be lost to space: either through solar radiation pressure, or if they are ionised, by being swept away by the solar wind's magnetic field.
water doesn't evaporate in space, it sublimates, like ice in your freezer.
pro, your thoughts?
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