Alan Davies
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But for a lot of people, day one without the moon, they might just think, a bit cloudy tonight.
So at the end of one day without the moon, those who believe it's gone forever are really in a panic.
The rest of us just think it's probably a cloudy night.
Here we are, exactly 29 and a half days in, and the scientific community is still working tirelessly to figure out why the moon disappeared on us that night.
When you watch Star Wars and you see the twin moons of Tatooine, are you a bit jealous?
Luke, you've taken the Museum of the Moon to more than 40 countries.
Is there enough stuff on the Moon to make it worth digging holes in it and mining it?
Luke, you're from the Bristol area and the Severn River, the Estuary, has the highest tide in the UK.
Is that what piqued your interest in the moon?
There are some upsides, but it's quite devastating.
I'm having a slight existential wobble.
The moon's always this quiet constant that we could count on, and now it's just not there.
Do you think that losing the moon might push us to take better care of the Earth out of knowing now what it feels like to really lose something?
The Earth and the Moon are made of almost the same kind of cosmic DNA.
You've lost your library of the Earth's history.
I don't think I want to push this experiment much beyond the 10-year mark, but I'm curious, could losing the Moon eventually make the Earth uninhabitable?