• Thorry84
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    5 months ago

    Well if we’re going to nitpick: It probably isn’t possible to build a sand castle on the moon without some special tools. Everyone who’s ever made a sand castle on the beach knows you need some water in the sand to make anything. Otherwise it’s just a pile of sand and won’t hold any shape at all. Now the dust on the moon is a combination of bigger and very small particles, so it kinda acts like flower on a small scale, thus footprints are visible. But I don’t think you could form any large structure, anything above a centimeter or so would collapse into a pile.

    With some special tools you could put the moondust in a mold and apply pressure, that way it would maybe hold it’s shape. But it would be a big challenge.

    • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      On the other hand, the combination of microgravity, no wind, and more jagged sand particles might lead to better cohesion

      • Thorry84
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        5 months ago

        It’s hard to say, but I wouldn’t call the moon microgravity, it’s at 1/6th of Earth gravity. The moon particles are more jagged and also often statically charged, which may help or be a hindrance. Plus there’s the whole spacesuit thing, those gloves make it hard to do anything, let alone build a small structure with fine details like a sand castle.