Submitted by Delicious-Day-3332 t3_11p8kio in space
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Submitted by Delicious-Day-3332 t3_11p8kio in space
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> Can lunar gravitational forces affect the inner ear?
Technically yes, because gravity reaches infinitely far. Practically no; the moon is 80 times less massive and 60 times farther away than the earth, meaning it affects us 300 000 times less strongly. That's far beyond the sensitivity limit of the human saccule and utricle.
Thank you for that. I hate it when my saccule & utricle get discombobulated. The moon still intrigues me - especially full moons & eclipses.
Sure it can, that's not even fringe science - it's well-established. Don't discount the effect of gravity; it may be weak, but it's strong enough to pull the ocean all out of shape.
Also, the moon is a great big light in the sky. Light affects behavior and sleep - but not through your ears..
It's always a full moon you just can't see it.
Uh oh. I never considered a "Cloaking Moon." π³ Now, that's an interesting consideration.
My mom was an ER nurse and she was convinced that full moons brought out the crazies.
A repot from BBC looked at this. What do you think?
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190731-is-the-moon-impacting-your-mood-and-wellbeing
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Delicious_Wrap4944 t1_jbwlw1n wrote
When itβs a full moon and the light is coming through my window definitely harder to fall asleep ππ my blinds suck