InvaderSquoosh
First Post
also... from what you posted it seems like you said new moons are dependent on eclipses. i thought they were just new because the sun was shining on the non-visible side?
I messed up. Again. By new/blue moon, I really meant full moon that gets covered by the Earth's shadow. Ignore the blue part of the last post, blue moons are two full moons in a month. I don't think in terms of blue/new/full moons, my knowledge is mostly visual. Sorry for the confusion!
Edit: I modified that post so it reads clearly. Apologies to all recent readers.
also, how big would the earth's shadow be on mars during eclipses?
Actually, I'm not even sure if the shadow will reach it. The shadow might taper out before then. Just fudge it for your campaign.
also, if the phases of the moon are dependent on how often it rotates the earth, then wouldn't pseudo-phobos go through its fazes more quickly than pseudo-mars?
Yes. Pseudo-Phobos would go through its phases more quickly.
also, how often would phobos go around the earth and how long would it take to cross the sky?
Argh, more math. It would probably orbit somewhat faster due to Earth's mass. Phobos does Mars in 1/3 day.
I messed up. Again. By new/blue moon, I really meant full moon that gets covered by the Earth's shadow. Ignore the blue part of the last post, blue moons are two full moons in a month. I don't think in terms of blue/new/full moons, my knowledge is mostly visual. Sorry for the confusion!

also, how big would the earth's shadow be on mars during eclipses?
Actually, I'm not even sure if the shadow will reach it. The shadow might taper out before then. Just fudge it for your campaign.

also, if the phases of the moon are dependent on how often it rotates the earth, then wouldn't pseudo-phobos go through its fazes more quickly than pseudo-mars?
Yes. Pseudo-Phobos would go through its phases more quickly.
also, how often would phobos go around the earth and how long would it take to cross the sky?
Argh, more math. It would probably orbit somewhat faster due to Earth's mass. Phobos does Mars in 1/3 day.
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