Assalaamu�alaikum
Warahmatullohi Wabarokatuh,
When I stated that the Qur'an is
the most trusted scientific literature, there
was someone asked me to prove the truth of Qur'an
Surah-54 (Al Qamar/The Moon), Verse-1 below:
The Hour
has come near, and the moon has split.
Suddenly
I felt my cold sweat come out quite torrential, because at that time (almost
ten years ago) I only knew one of the Moon�s idiosyncrasy, which is only one
part of the Moon�s surface that can only be seen from the Earth all time. Just
like a kite, only the side with the picture can be seen from below, while the
other is mysterious side as long as the kite is flying.
The only
Moon�s surface that can be seen from the Earth named the "near side",
while the other side named the "far side". This is happens, because
the time periode that is needed by the Moon to rotate once is exactly the same
with the time periode of the Moon to evolute around the Earth once and it is
named �synchronous rotation�. And Just a few months ago I dare to state the
synchronous rotation occurs because the
physical of the Moon is only a half.
But
please do not ask me to prove it, because I will not be able to make a
"spacecraft or rocket" to go to the Moon as required by the Qur'an Surah-55 (Ar Rahman), Verse-33:
Hi
jama'ah jinn and mankind, if you are able to penetrate (crosses) over the
heavens and the earth, then cross, you can not penetrate it except by force.
But
because I am afraid of Allah's wrath when not using "sense" that has
been bestowed Him to us as stated by the Qur'an
Surah-10 (Yunus), Verse-100:
And no
one will believe except by the permission of Allah, and Allah inflict wrath to
those who do not use their sense.
So just
do a simple and cheap simulation:
Put a little handful of sand into a round shape
balloon and fill the balloon with a kind of light gas. Then the balloon side
with the sand that's shaped "half of moon" will always at the bottom,
because of the Earth gravitation.
Hopefully
this article is usefull and thank you for your attention and responses.
Wassalaam.
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