Dragonrock
Militant Elvisian Tacoist
I thought about this after reading about the moon running away from the earth.
The moon is orbiting the earth in the same direction as the earth's rotation. Because of this the earth is imparting some of its rotational energy into the moon causing the moon's orbit to increase very slowly. Now, suppose there was an earthlike planet that did not have a moon and a large asteroid were somehow moving by that planet at just the right speed and happened to get caught in a stable, circular, equatorial orbit in the opposite direction of planetary rotation.
My question is, would that orbit be stable enough to last billions of years and would it have any effects on said planet that would prevent the development of intelligent life? Assuming that, would the transfer of rotational energy gradually slow the moon until it fell from orbit?
The moon is orbiting the earth in the same direction as the earth's rotation. Because of this the earth is imparting some of its rotational energy into the moon causing the moon's orbit to increase very slowly. Now, suppose there was an earthlike planet that did not have a moon and a large asteroid were somehow moving by that planet at just the right speed and happened to get caught in a stable, circular, equatorial orbit in the opposite direction of planetary rotation.
My question is, would that orbit be stable enough to last billions of years and would it have any effects on said planet that would prevent the development of intelligent life? Assuming that, would the transfer of rotational energy gradually slow the moon until it fell from orbit?