A random collision sounds like the worst way to design a climate system, yet Earth’s apparent chaos paid off. Out of a high‑energy smash between the young planet and a Mars‑size body, models suggest, debris coalesced into a single large satellite. From that accident came a gravity partner big enough, and close enough, to shape almost every long‑term habit of the planet’s surface.
Most underrated is the way this companion locks Earth’s axial tilt into a narrow band. Without lunar torque on the equatorial bulge, simulations show the spin axis wandering wildly under gravitational perturbation from other planets, flipping between steep and shallow angles that would drive extreme swings in insolation and atmospheric circulation. With the Moon, precession slows, obliquity variations shrink, and climate zones migrate less violently across the continents.
Less obvious is the calendar hidden in friction. By raising tides in the oceans and crust, the Moon converts rotational kinetic energy into heat through tidal dissipation, steadily lengthening the day and pushing itself outward. A short day means fiercer winds and stronger Coriolis forces; a longer one, imposed by lunar braking, softens those gradients and gives biological and chemical cycles more stable light‑dark windows to exploit.
Even the impact threat gets edited rather than erased. Lunar craters record past bombardment that might otherwise have hit ocean or land, and the Moon’s cross‑section intercepts some incoming bodies outright. Its gravity also perturbs near‑Earth objects, occasionally steering fragments inward but just as often deflecting or breaking them, so the planet experiences a filtered impact flux instead of the raw output of the inner system.