this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
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✍️ Writing

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A community for writers, like poems, fiction, non-fiction, short stories, long books, all those sorts of things, to discuss writing approaches and what's new in the writing world, and to help each other with writing.

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Been thinking about writing a solarpunk story about a far future where humans live on this habitable Earth-like moon, but I'm wondering how the weather would work if the Earth-like moon is tidally locked to a gas giant and thus one day on the moon corresponds to a full orbit which would be like longer than an Earth week. So parts of the moon would be in night for several Earth days long, and other parts would be regularly eclipsed by the massive gas giant as well, making a sort of night.

How would the weather work in such a case? Would it freeze every night on this world? Or would winds and atmosphere still regulate temperatures?

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[–] cerement 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

check out Artifexian (Youtube / Piped / Invidious) – they’ve done a whole series of videos on the physicality/geology of world building

[–] mambabasa 2 points 7 months ago

Yup already did, but their work on habitable moons are a bit lacking.