this post was submitted on 10 Aug 2024
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I know this is just for laughs, but from what I've read, Jupiter's gravity well does about as much harm as good.
Venus was habitable (with vast oceans, plate tectonics, soil and everything) for 3 billion years (almost 70% of its history!), until about 700 million years ago... it stopped being habitable because of Jupiter.
From Wikipedia:
Considering there's a good chance Jupiter obliterated our next door neighbours, an entire planet of organisms... yea it's not as nice as it seems
Oh well. Mars was also habitable for a few hundred million years – in fact, the river beds and remnants of the Martian oceans are still very clearly visible on 2/3 of the surface, even after 4 billion years, and NASA is on a mission to bring fossils of ancient Martian life back to Earth, if there are any. But all of its atmosphere leaked out into space because its dynamo (magnetic field generation) abruptly disappeared so... skill issue lol. One of the many possible contributing factors to that happening is that giant impacts during that period of time overheated its mantle which fucked up global heat flow & convection near the core so... Jupiter's fault again?
Wasn't that because Mars isn't heavy enough?
Well, its small mass certainly contributed to it losing heat more efficiently. But Mercury (much less massive than Mars) and Ganymede (around the same mass as Mars) both have a magnetic field, so there are a lot of other factors at play. Something to do with a change in the chemical composition of Mars' mantle, and the possible lack of plate tectonics, I'm not so familiar with the causes though.