digi and leo (bandai namco and etc) created by yourdigimongirl
Viewing sample resized to 78% of original (view original) Loading...
Description

wow! So rude to interrupt my spreading of facts! at least she didn't notice anything, right? 😋

Beach Arc coming up! Find 5 more pages now, check the patreon! 📕🔞
https://twitter.com/YourDigimonGirl
https://www.patreon.com/yourdigimongirl
https://bsky.app/profile/yourdigimongirl.bsky.social

Blacklisted

    This week's fun animal fact: the Swell Shark is a small shark in the catfish family that can be found off the coast of California and Mexico. It's called the Swell Shark because when threatened, it swallows so much seawater that its stomach balloons to twice its size.

    I will be back next week with another fun animal fact.

  • |
  • 16
  • Space fact of the week;

    Rocky/terrestrial planets cannot form more than one large spherical moon, since as soon as one forms, it will consume the large majority of the material around its parent planet. Any other moons the planet may form will be small asteroid-like bodies.

    Another thing about moon formation; they will form along the motion of rotation of the planet they orbit, think of the inner moons of the gas giants, where they follow the planet’s axial tilt. The only gas giant major moons to break this trend is Saturn’s moon Iapetus, where it’s on a distant, less inclined orbit, and Neptune’s moon Triton, which is on a highly-tilted retrograde orbit.

  • |
  • 5
  • chalcopyrite35 said:
    Space fact of the week;

    Rocky/terrestrial planets cannot form more than one large spherical moon, since as soon as one forms, it will consume the large majority of the material around its parent planet. Any other moons the planet may form will be small asteroid-like bodies.

    Another thing about moon formation; they will form along the motion of rotation of the planet they orbit, think of the inner moons of the gas giants, where they follow the planet’s axial tilt. The only gas giant major moons to break this trend is Saturn’s moon Iapetus, where it’s on a distant, less inclined orbit, and Neptune’s moon Triton, which is on a highly-tilted retrograde orbit.

    what happens if there's two separate moon-sized blobs of rock? do they eventually cannibalize eachother to form one moon or do they live in peace?

  • |
  • 0
  • goobie_ii said:
    what happens if there's two separate moon-sized blobs of rock? do they eventually cannibalize eachother to form one moon or do they live in peace?

    Gravity perturbations end up either ejecting one of the bodies from the system (possibly also sending both the moons and the planet they orbited on trajectories that cause their demise), or nudges it into a collision with the other body — which also may cause the demise of the remaining planet and moon. A lot of these kinds of planetoids and moons form early in the life of a solar system, and end up being ejected from their host star systems. Many of these so-called Rogue Planets are thought to be floating out there in interstellar space, cold and dark, with no stars to give them light or heat.

    Updated

  • |
  • 1
  • Its awsome that over the years more and more people have been here to comment about a type of facts when the comic is finished and if there wil be a physical copy sold we need a couple of pages at the end with the best facts trough the years

  • |
  • 2