Earth's moon (proper name is actually Luna) formed from the planet Theia colliding into Earth (proper name is actually Terra). This event initially formed two moons, one larger and one smaller (the smaller moon wasn't able to remain stable, and didn't last. Most of it was combined with our current moon, scattered across Earth's surface, and ejected out of Earth's gravitational pull. The Earth did have rings, but only for a short period of time. Eventually all of the debris settled, for the Earth's gravity isn't capable of maintaining rings for elongated periods of time like the gas giants in our solar system can (yes, Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune all have rings).
The fact that the moon was larger than it was is insane
Damn the earth is 45 Billion years old? 🗿💀🇺🇸🥩🥓
Imagine seeing the moon when ever it was on fire 🔥
Imagine seeing life on moon and water and land
The title says 45 billion years and that's older than the universe
dude its 4,5 billon not 45 billon
@@arelybueno-c8c yeah well in the title it’s says 45 billion
Thank you for the person who went back in time 4.5 billion years ago to see what it looked like and tell us🙏
Rip to all who actually believe this
So why is it hallow
also how do you know
Planetary science, astrophysics, and advanced mathematics
It was evolved cause a astroud luna crashed into earth and formed a moon if it was crashed different it would have a ring system
It was a demo planet not astroid.
Earth's moon (proper name is actually Luna) formed from the planet Theia colliding into Earth (proper name is actually Terra). This event initially formed two moons, one larger and one smaller (the smaller moon wasn't able to remain stable, and didn't last. Most of it was combined with our current moon, scattered across Earth's surface, and ejected out of Earth's gravitational pull. The Earth did have rings, but only for a short period of time. Eventually all of the debris settled, for the Earth's gravity isn't capable of maintaining rings for elongated periods of time like the gas giants in our solar system can (yes, Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune all have rings).