The universe is vast, and we've seen plenty of evidence that anything can happen, not just in our galaxy, but even in our solar system. Therefore, any simulation may one day represent reality.
However, the Moon's formation was marked by catastrophic circumstances, when a still-young Earth collided with a smaller planet roughly the size of Mars about 4.5 billion years ago. Eventually it was formed from the material that erupted the moonwhich, by the way, moves away a little from our planet every year, exactly 4 centimeters.
Something very strange has happened to the moon, and it's troubling that they don't know why
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This doesn't sound like much, but astronomical scales can't really be measured in human age, so in billions of years the increasing distance will have a serious impact, affecting the tides, among other things, which will one day equal the orbital periods of the two celestial bodies.
However, in this simulation, we can see the opposite of events, which will not occur over billions of years, and will involve more dramatic developments. According to the idea, the moon will get closer and closer to the Earth for an unspecified reason, and after a year it will almost collide with our planet.
[[cikkk2]]Already in the first months, tsunamis and huge earthquakes would wipe out the population, then more and more volcanoes erupted, and finally the moon came so close that total solar eclipses became commonplace.
However, in the end, the Moon will not collide with our planet, but upon reaching the Roche limit, it will practically be torn into small pieces due to tidal forces, and then form a ring around the Earth. So, if anyone had survived all of this, it would have been a truly amazing view even from the surface, and from a distance the Earth would have resembled the planet Saturn, which is of course the one that would be destroyed. For our moon There will be little consolation.