logo
What's up with Star Wars' bizarre 'mono-climate' planets?

What's up with Star Wars' bizarre 'mono-climate' planets?

Yahoo05-05-2025
Everywhere we look, a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, there are weird worlds that seemingly possess only one climate. How does that happen, though? How could these 'mono-climate' planets come to be?
Here on Earth, we have numerous climates, from tropical rainforests and scorching deserts near the equator, to the icy wastelands of the north and south poles. These are spread about on four major land masses — the Americas, Afro-Eurasia, Antarctica, and Australia — that cover about 30 per cent of the planet's surface, with oceans making up the rest. Latitude and general weather patterns are the dominant factors that control exactly where these climates exist.
In this image of Earth, snapped by the DSCOVER satellite's EPIC camera on July 15, 2020, we see snow and ice, mountains, plains, grasslands, forests, jungles, oceans, and deserts. (NASA)
In the Star Wars galaxy, though, most (if not all) of the habitable planets and moons we've seen have only one climate that covers the entire world.
Although the action often takes place on just a small portion of the surface, seen from orbit, even planets that are reasonably Earth-like still lack some basic features that should exist there, such as polar ice caps. So, how could worlds have developed like this, naturally?
Tatooine is a desert world baked by twin stars — Tatoo I and Tatoo II.
Like Mars, it likely had a much wetter environment in its past. The Dune Sea is evidence of it having a vast ocean, which probably dried up due to the system's binary stars heated up as they aged.
Or, perhaps, like Jakku, with its immense impact scar, some cataclysmic event may have caused the planet to lose its water. In either case, there is likely not enough moisture on the planet for polar ice caps to form.
Other desert worlds in Star Wars include Mandalore, Geonosis, Jedha, Pasaana, and Arvala-7.
Dagobah, the planet where Jedi Master Yoda went into seclusion after the Clone Wars, and where he trained Luke Skywalker, is completely covered in swamps and bogs. This is very likely due to the thick layer of clouds that blankets the planet, similar to what we see on Venus (although not to the same extreme).
The planet's persistent clouds would trap light and heat, producing a fairly uniform range of temperatures across the entire surface.
'Mud' planets, such as Mimban and Wobani, are probably quite similar, although they apparently lack the abundant biosphere of Dagobah.
Kashyyyk, the homeworld of the Wookiees, is an entire planet covered by expansive rainforests and jungles, with numerous small tropical seas. The planet's lack of an axial tilt means it does not experience seasons.
Also, the truly massive biosphere of this planet, with wroshyr trees growing up to 400 metres tall, may be what maintains relatively uniform temperatures from pole to pole.
Other forest worlds we've seen include Tokodana, the planet that became Starkiller base, Dantooine, Sorgan, and Corvus. How these worlds maintain their uniform climate is not as clear.
An ice planet like Hoth could develop fairly easily, simply by having an Earth-like world form farther out from its star. It's also possible that Hoth had simply gone through a climatic change, similar to the 'Snowball Earth' stage our planet may have gone through around 650 million years ago.
It's thought that, at the time, the eruption of a supervolcano may have pumped enough dust or sunlight-reflecting sulfur compounds into the atmosphere to cool the climate. It is also possible that a surge in ocean life may have reduced the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, triggering a global cooling event.
For the moons of Yavin IV and Endor, the infrared radiation (heat) given off by the gas giant planets they orbit can supply more than twice the energy the moons would receive from their system's parent star.
This would be an abundant heat source, especially if the planet was reasonably close to its star (perhaps at the same relative distance that Mars is from our Sun). This added heat would help polar regions of the moons maintain a more temperate climate, as well.
Once a lush world, Mustafar is a volcanic planet that was plunged into a gravitational 'tug-of-war' between two immense gas giants after it was knocked out of its original orbit. The intense gravity of these two massive worlds would squeeze and squish Mustafar's core, ramping up the heat inside the planet until it caused volcanoes to erupt across its surface.
This same kind of 'tidal squeezing' is evident in our own solar system, with Jupiter's closest Galilean moon, Io, being one of the most volcanically active objects in the system.
The sunlit hemisphere of Io is shown here, marked by numerous volcanoes 'powered' by the tidal squeezing of the moon by massive Jupiter, as well as Europa and Ganymede. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Thomas Thomopoulos)
Moons like Jupiter's Europa and Saturn's Enceladus likely have oceans of liquid water, even at their far distance from the Sun, due to the added internal heat from this same kind of tidal action.
Kamino and Mon Cala are two examples of 'ocean worlds' in the Star Wars galaxy. Both of these planets likely have no dry land at all. From the exoplanets astronomers have discovered in our own galaxy, these two could fall into the "super-Earth" category. With heavier gravity than we experience here, this kind of planet holds on to more atmosphere, and would tend to develop deeper oceans. It's also possible that they simply developed in planetary systems that had more available water, or were under heavier bombardment by comets early on.
As for the climate of these worlds, the global ocean of such a planet would absorb a large amount of incoming solar radiation, and would be slower to give this heat up. With internal ocean currents and likely frequent hurricane-class storms delivering that heat from the equator to the poles, these planets could also maintain fairly uniform global temperatures. Ahch-to, where Jedi Master Luke Skywalker lived during his self-imposed exile, is another example, although this planet had numerous rocky islands. Scarif, which housed the Empire's data vaults, is another example, although its oceans appeared to be shallow, and Crait is likely another, although its oceans have long dried up, leaving behind a planet-wide crust of salt.
This may look like a planet in a galaxy far, far away, but it is actually an artist's representation of TOI 700d, an Earth-sized exoplanet found by NASA's TESS telescope in 2020. (NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center)
There are a few bodies in our own solar system that, if they were closer to the Sun, would be water-worlds. Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, Enceladus and Titan, and even the 'asteroid' Ceres, would qualify.
As we see above, there are many mono-climate worlds in the Star Wars galaxy that could exist simply by natural means. However, several defy explanation if you only look at what could have developed without intervention.
Alderaan, Naboo, and Lothal appear to be some of the most 'temperate' planets in the Star Wars galaxy. Each has (or had) its own dominant terrain, though — Alderaan: mountains, Naboo: hills and lakes, and Lothal: grasslands.
Planets like these would need help to maintain one global climate, though.
Given the technological level of the galaxy, with antigravity, interstellar travel, synthetic intelligence, and so on, it is very likely that the Republic developed the means to terraform (Coruscant-form?) planets. Any world that was suitable, but for some reason did not develop a habitable climate on its own, would then have its climate deliberately adjusted to meet the needs of a new colony.
Artificial weather modification could redistribute heat and moisture across a planet's surface, making as much of it habitable as possible. This could easily include the melting of a planet's polar ice caps, to transport that water to more temperate zones, thus smoothing out any variation of climates that would have occurred without that intervention.
Finally, planets like Coruscant and Hosnian Prime are best described as 'urban planets', or ecumenopoli, due to the fact that nearly every square centimetre of their surfaces is covered in city sprawl.
On Coruscant, the urban environment is so extreme that, to see any of its original surface, residents and tourists need to visit Monument Plaza, on the planet's 5,216th level. There, they can see the summit of Umate, Coruscant's tallest mountain, poking up above the new artificial surface. If Umate was the same height as Mount Everest on Earth, that level would be at over 8,000 metres above Coruscant's original sea level, making the air so thin that you couldn't breathe for long without collapsing.
That implies that Coruscant is completely climate-controlled, with all weather suppressed or altered through technology. Also, with its biosphere reduced to nothing and a population numbering in the trillions, the planet would even need atmospheric processors running constantly to add and refresh the oxygen content of the air.
In reality, many planets in our galaxy (and even other galaxies) will probably have a variety of climates, like Earth. However, given the variety we have discovered so far, who knows what we will end up finding in the future! In the meantime, we can continue to enjoy the multitude of bizarre worlds shown to us in the Star Wars universe.
May the Fourth be with you!
Click here to view the video
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Picking a Spot for NASA's Lunar Nuclear Reactor Is Trickier Than It Sounds
Picking a Spot for NASA's Lunar Nuclear Reactor Is Trickier Than It Sounds

Gizmodo

time12 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

Picking a Spot for NASA's Lunar Nuclear Reactor Is Trickier Than It Sounds

In a bold, strategic move for the U.S., acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy announced plans on Aug. 5, 2025, to build a nuclear fission reactor for deployment on the lunar surface in 2030. Doing so would allow the United States to gain a foothold on the Moon by the time China plans to land the first taikonaut, what China calls its astronauts, there by 2030. Apart from the geopolitical importance, there are other reasons why this move is critically important. A source of nuclear energy will be necessary for visiting Mars, because solar energy is weaker there. It could also help establish a lunar base and potentially even a permanent human presence on the Moon, as it delivers consistent power through the cold lunar night. As humans travel out into the solar system, learning to use the local resources is critical for sustaining life off Earth, starting at the nearby Moon. NASA plans to prioritize the fission reactor as power necessary to extract and refine lunar resources. As a geologist who studies human space exploration, I've been mulling over two questions since Duffy's announcement. First, where is the best place to put an initial nuclear reactor on the Moon to set up for future lunar bases? Second, how will NASA protect the reactor from plumes of regolith—or loosely fragmented lunar rocks—kicked up by spacecraft landing near it? These are two key questions the agency will have to answer as it develops this technology. The nuclear reactor will likely form the power supply for the initial U.S.-led Moon base that will support humans who'll stay for ever-increasing lengths of time. To facilitate sustainable human exploration of the Moon, using local resources such as water and oxygen for life support and hydrogen and oxygen to refuel spacecraft can dramatically reduce the amount of material that needs to be brought from Earth, which also reduces cost. In the 1990s, spacecraft orbiting the Moon first observed dark craters called permanently shadowed regions on the lunar north and south poles. Scientists now suspect these craters hold water in the form of ice, a vital resource for countries looking to set up a long-term human presence on the surface. NASA's Artemis campaign aims to return people to the Moon, targeting the lunar south pole to take advantage of the water ice that is present there. In order to be useful, the reactor must be close to accessible, extractable, and refinable water ice deposits. The issue is we currently do not have the detailed information needed to define such a location. The good news is the information can be obtained relatively quickly. Six lunar orbital missions have collected, and in some cases are still collecting, relevant data that can help scientists pinpoint which water ice deposits are worth pursuing. These datasets give indications of where either surface or buried water ice deposits are. It is looking at these datasets in tandem that can indicate water ice 'hot prospects,' which rover missions can investigate and confirm or deny the orbital observations. But this step isn't easy. Luckily, NASA already has its Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover mission built, and it has passed all environmental testing. It is currently in storage, awaiting a ride to the Moon. The VIPER mission can be used to investigate on the ground the hottest prospect for water ice identified from orbital data. With enough funding, NASA could probably have this data in a year or two at both the lunar north and south poles. Once NASA knows the best spots to put a reactor, it will then have to figure out how to shield the reactor from spacecraft as they land. As spacecraft approach the Moon's surface, they stir up loose dust and rocks, called regolith. It will sandblast anything close to the landing site, unless the items are placed behind large boulders or beyond the horizon, which is more than 1.5 miles (2.4 kilometers) away on the Moon. Scientists already know about the effects of landing next to a pre-positioned asset. In 1969, Apollo 12 landed 535 feet (163 meters) away from the robotic Surveyor 3 spacecraft, which showed corrosion on surfaces exposed to the landing plume. The Artemis campaign will have much bigger lunar landers, which will generate larger regolith plumes than Apollo did. So any prepositioned assets will need protection from anything landing close by, or the landing will need to occur beyond the horizon. Until NASA can develop a custom launch and landing pad, using the lunar surface's natural topography or placing important assets behind large boulders could be a temporary solution. However, a pad built just for launching and landing spacecraft will eventually be necessary for any site chosen for this nuclear reactor, as it will take multiple visits to build a lunar base. While the nuclear reactor can supply the power needed to build a pad, this process will require planning and investment. Human space exploration is complicated. But carefully building up assets on the Moon means scientists will eventually be able to do the same thing a lot farther away on Mars. While the devil is in the details, the Moon will help NASA develop the abilities to use local resources and build infrastructure that could allow humans to survive and thrive off Earth in the long term. Clive Neal, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences, University of Notre Dame. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

This Newly Launched Satellite Just ‘Bloomed' a Record-Breaking Antenna in Orbit
This Newly Launched Satellite Just ‘Bloomed' a Record-Breaking Antenna in Orbit

Gizmodo

time12 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

This Newly Launched Satellite Just ‘Bloomed' a Record-Breaking Antenna in Orbit

A first-of-its-kind satellite recently launched into orbit to monitor Earth's changing surfaces, detecting movement of the planet's crust down to fractions of an inch. The satellite packed a giant radar antenna, folded like an umbrella, and it just unfurled the massive, drum-shaped structure through an intricate process that brought it to full bloom. The NISAR mission, a joint effort between NASA and the Indian space agency ISRO, launched on July 30 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre in India. More than two weeks later, the satellite deployed its antenna reflector, which spans 39 feet (12 meters) wide—the largest ever used on a NASA mission. The team behind the mission began the process on August 9, unfolding the satellite's boom one joint at a time and then firing a series of explosive bolts so that it could be deployed and locked into place in space. 'We were of course eager to see the deployment go well. It's a critical part of the NISAR Earth science mission and has taken years to design, develop, and test to be ready for this big day,' Phil Barela, NISAR project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, said in a statement. 'Now that we've launched, we are focusing on fine-tuning it to begin delivering transformative science by late fall of this year.' NISAR, short for NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar, is designed to produce a three-dimensional view of Earth in unprecedented detail. The mission is equipped with the most sophisticated radar system for a NASA mission. The antenna reflector plays a key role for NISAR's two synthetic aperture radar (SAR) systems, which use the motion of the radar antenna over its targeted area to create high-resolution images. 'Synthetic aperture radar, in principle, works like the lens of a camera, which focuses light to make a sharp image,' Paul Rosen, NISAR's project scientist at JPL, said in a statement. 'The size of the lens, called the aperture, determines the sharpness of the image.' The first radar system, L-band, can see through clouds and forest canopy. The second, an S-band system provided by ISRO, can see through clouds as well but is more sensitive to light vegetation and moisture in snow, according to NASA. The reflector weighs about 142 pounds (64 kilograms) and comes with a cylindrical frame made of 123 composite struts and a gold-plated wire mesh. At the beginning of the process, NISAR's boom began unfolding one joint at a time after being tucked in close to the satellite's body. It took four days for it to become fully extended. On August 15, the team fired a series of small explosive bolts that held the reflector assembly in place to begin what NASA calls the 'bloom' process. Through this process, the antenna unfurled by releasing tension stored in its flexible frame while it was tucked away like an umbrella. The team then activated motors and cables that pulled the antenna to its final form, blooming in its full glory. The reflector is as wide as the length of a school bus, enabling NISAR to image Earth's surface down to pixels about 30 feet (10 meters) across. 'Using special interferometric techniques that compare images over time, NISAR enables researchers and data users to create 3D movies of changes happening on Earth's surface,' Rosen said.

All Weaknesses of Xenomorphs in Alien: Earth & Past Movies Listed
All Weaknesses of Xenomorphs in Alien: Earth & Past Movies Listed

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

All Weaknesses of Xenomorphs in Alien: Earth & Past Movies Listed

Despite being apex predators, Xenomorphs in the Alien franchise have many weaknesses, and Alien: Earth seemingly confirmed another one in its second episode. With this rare weakness added to the canon, there are now more ways to take on the mighty Xenomorphs. Here is a list of every weakness the Xenomorphs have in the Alien franchise. List of all weaknesses of Xenomorphs from Alien: Earth and before Electricity Electricity is the latest weakness of the Xenomorph revealed in the recent Alien: Earth episode. Apart from the weaknesses shown earlier in the films, this is another factor that can subdue the extraterrestrial creature. Alien: Romulus previously teased electricity as a weakness. The new series confirmed that electricity can temporarily, or in large quantities, permanently disable the Xenomorph. Morrow subdued the alien with a prolonged bolt of electricity from a taser in the second episode of Alien: Earth. Bullets Despite being very strong, the Xenomorphs are not bulletproof. However, using bullets against them can still be complicated, as their blood is acidic. As seen in previous movies, their blood can melt through human skin and even spacecraft, making the use of bullets or explosives risky when facing this creature. Space The relatively safer weakness of the apex predator, ejecting the creatures into space, has been one of the more reliable methods of killing them in the Alien franchise. Alien and Aliens focused on this method. Though Alien: Romulus depicted how space may not be enough to completely kill off every Xenomorph, it remains among the most effective ways of eliminating the creature without collateral damage. Extreme Temperatures Extreme temperatures have also been a recurring method in the Alien franchise for killing Xenomorphs. From flamethrowers to extreme thermal heat, Xenomorphs struggle to survive in such conditions. Alien 3 had a memorable sequence where the prisoners tried to drown the Xenomorph hybrid in molten lead. Though it did not kill the creature immediately, the use of cold water afterward caused thermal shock that killed the Xenomorph. The first two episodes of Alien: Earth are now streaming on Hulu. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store