Horizons Planet showcase - post your most beautiful shots that you are really proud of

Elite - Dangerous (CLIENT) 10.11.2022 21_16_42.jpg
 
UPD: My apologize, I've made a post at wrong thread last night, but don't know how to delete it now. Admin, could you pls delete this post
:oops: o7
 
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Impossible planet configuration, but nice view... :)
I think it is actually possible. Although I think it is unlikely to occur, it looks like once it did occur, it would be pretty stable.
(Also the proximity would make both moons quite ellipsoidal, sorta-melon-shaped one might say, although it would not be very visible from this perspective.)
 
I think it is actually possible. Although I think it is unlikely to occur, it looks like once it did occur, it would be pretty stable.
(Also the proximity would make both moons quite ellipsoidal, sorta-melon-shaped one might say, although it would not be very visible from this perspective.)
They would tear each other apart at this distance and become an orbiting debris cloud, eventually another ring of the giant. :)
 
They would tear each other apart at this distance and become an orbiting debris cloud, eventually another ring of the giant. :)
I don’t think so. If both moons have similar masses (which is probably the case), they can be very close together without one destroying the other — although, as I said, the gravitational gradients would deform them. This is conceptually not different from very close binary stars like the Beta Lyrae primary pair.

(BTW, all Roche limit formulae I could find are derived with the assumption that mM and/or rR.)

How high is the gravity on these moons? Most moons I have visited so far have not enough power to tear another body apart.
That gas giant, though...
An icy moon 2000 km across (i.e. radius = 1000 km, quite typical for ED) surely has enough mass to disrupt a smaller, say Enceladus-sized (radius ≈ 250 km), icy moon if the latter came well within its Roche limit for a sufficiently long time. Their gravity may be weak, but the effects scale with the size and accumulate over time — that is what makes those moons’ shapes roughly spherical. (Incidentally, very small, irregularly-shaped moons tend to be more difficult to disrupt because they are held together by tensile strength more than by gravity; that’s how there can be a few of them inside Saturn’s rings.)

However, what we have in that picture is certainly two similarly-sized moons, so the actual Roche limit is likely to be less than the distance between them.

The gas giant, OTOH, appears to be at a safe distance. :)
 
However, what we have in that picture is certainly two similarly-sized moons, so the actual Roche limit is likely to be less than the distance between them.
Which seems to be quite common in ED. I have seen quite a few in a limited space - Haven't managed to leave the bubble, yet, let alone visited all of it. 4 engineers and their surroundings as well as some stars in between, that's all so far.
 
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