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๐ŸŒ™Moon

The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite, sitting about 238,855 miles from us and shaping our planet in ways we barely notice on a daily basis. It is widely thought to have formed about 4.5 billion years ago, when a Mars-sized body called Theia slammed into the young Earth and the resulting debris coalesced into the gray world we see at night. This giant impact theory is still the leading explanation, and it is why the Moon is so chemically similar to Earth's mantle. Beyond its scientific story, the Moon owns a huge slice of human culture. It controls the tides, defines the lunar calendar used by billions of people for religious holidays, and starred in the most famous space mission of all time when Apollo 11 landed in 1969. On moomz, the Moon is a magnet for polls. Night-owl identity, full-moon chaos energy, sleep habits and zodiac talk all orbit around it. Whether you are convinced your worst breakups happen on full moons or you just want to argue about whether the dark side of the Moon is actually dark, this page is your launchpad. Vote, share, watch the bars move, and remember the Moon was watching long before any of us had Wi-Fi.

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How the Moon formed and what it does

The dominant scientific story is the giant impact hypothesis: about 4.5 billion years ago, a body roughly the size of Mars collided with the young Earth, ejecting molten rock that condensed into the Moon over a few thousand years. The Moon is about a quarter the diameter of Earth, has roughly one sixth of our gravity and no real atmosphere, which is why footprints from the Apollo missions are still essentially undisturbed. Its gravitational pull is the main driver of ocean tides, and it also stabilizes Earth's axial tilt, keeping our climate relatively steady on long timescales. The Moon orbits us every 27.3 days and goes through its full phase cycle, from new moon to full and back, every 29.5 days. The slight difference between these numbers is because Earth itself is moving around the Sun. Total lunar eclipses, when Earth's shadow turns the Moon red, happen a few times per decade and are visible from anywhere on the night side of Earth, no telescope required.

Full moons, sleep and superstition

Does the full moon really make people act unhinged? Scientifically, large studies show small effects on sleep, with people falling asleep a few minutes later and sleeping a bit less around full moons. ER and police data, on the other hand, do not consistently show more crime or accidents, despite what the night shift will swear to you. Cultures everywhere have built rituals around lunar phases: Ramadan, Chinese New Year, Diwali, Easter and Passover all key off the Moon, not the Sun. Astrology fans tie new moons to fresh starts and full moons to release. None of this needs to be literally true for the Moon to feel powerful. The truth is that for most of human history, the Moon was our primary night light, and our brains still associate its presence with quiet, mystery and a bit of mild drama. Which is exactly why full-moon polls on moomz reliably spike.

Lunar polls that always pop on moomz

The most viral moon polls share a vibe: night versus day, chaos versus calm, supernatural versus rational. Are you a 6 am sunrise person or a 2 am moonlight person? Do you believe in full-moon energy or is that copium for bad weeks? Would you live on the Moon for a year for a million dollars? Eclipse over meteor shower? Polls that frame a question as identity-defining tend to spread fastest, because people vote and then immediately want to argue. On moomz, moon polls also pair beautifully with sleep, dating and zodiac themes, all of which already drive massive engagement. If you create a moon poll, keep the options sharp and slightly opinionated. The bars look extra cute with a ๐ŸŒ™ emoji and a glow effect, and night-themed share cards tend to outperform on Instagram stories. Try it after a full moon and watch the comments roll in.

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Frequently asked

Q.How far away is the Moon?+

The Moon orbits Earth at an average distance of about 238,855 miles or 384,400 kilometers. That distance changes a bit because the orbit is elliptical: at perigee the Moon is around 226,000 miles away, and at apogee it can be over 252,000 miles. When a full moon coincides with perigee, you get a so-called supermoon, which looks about 7 percent larger and 15 percent brighter than average. It is impressive in photos, but mostly hard to notice with the naked eye.

Q.How did the Moon form?+

The leading theory is the giant impact hypothesis. About 4.5 billion years ago, a Mars-sized body sometimes called Theia struck the young Earth at high speed. The collision vaporized huge amounts of rock from both bodies, and the debris settled into a disk around Earth that quickly coalesced into the Moon. That is why the Moon has a similar chemical signature to Earth's mantle but lacks the iron-rich core that planets formed by themselves usually have. Other ideas, like capture or co-formation, do not fit the chemistry nearly as well.

Q.Why does the Moon look bigger near the horizon?+

The Moon illusion is a trick of the brain, not optics. When the Moon is near the horizon, your visual system compares it to trees, buildings and mountains, which makes it look huge. High in the sky with nothing for reference, the same disk looks small. If you measure it with a coin held at arm's length, the size is essentially identical. Photos taken with a long lens exaggerate the effect because of compression, which is why every viral supermoon shot uses a telephoto setting.

Q.Has anyone walked on the Moon recently?+

The last humans to walk on the Moon were the Apollo 17 astronauts in December 1972. Since then, only robotic missions have landed there, including recent successes from China, India and private companies. NASA's Artemis program aims to send astronauts back, including the first woman and the first person of color, with Artemis III currently targeted for the late 2020s. Plenty of moomz polls debate whether we should focus on the Moon, Mars or just fixing Earth first.

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