Oh yeah? Betcha a thousand dollars your surveys will be shown wrong with further investigation.Approx 2% of asteroids have moons, according to the surveys.
Yeah, stating observations as if they justify a non-disclosed theory of yours and discount a proposed theory doesn't cut it.If two asteroids are in almost the same orbit, then the relative speeds will be very low. There are plenty of contact binary asteroids that show that collision speeds can be very low indeed.
We have a reason and an explanation for these observations.
:idunno:When I am talking about slow asteroid collisions, what else would I mean? ALL speeds are measured relative to something, and I thought this was obvious. (I didn't mention absolute speeds - did you think I meant that?)
You mention a lot of things and then when I ask what you mean you ignore me.
I do?You assume that all asteroid moons are in circular orbits.
Where?
I'm glad you understand the problem. Yes, it need not be a 90o turn. But something has to happen other than a collision sending pieces flying.Most asteroid moons are in quite elliptical orbits, so 90 deg turns are not necessary.
The average of the motions is either up and down or forever away.And with several objects launched into very elliptical orbits, collisions and amalgamation of these will tend to circularise somewhat the orbits by averaging the motions.
There are so many problems at every stage it's hard to answer. :chuckle:Yes. Only needs to be a few percent. And? The ones that are left may have tidally produced moons. This is a problem how?