EDG said:Would a planet realistically be able to support human life without a moon? Without lunar tides, could life exist on the planet without technological interference (terrraforming, oxygen scrubbers/purifiers, etc)?
Depends, but the answer is "quite possibly not". The tides aren't the issue, it's the fact that our moon was formed when something about the size of Mars slammed into Earth not long after it formed (giant impacts were not uncommon back then - the planets we see today are merely the survivors of that era, the ones in the most stable orbits and that didn't get hit by other worlds that were forming). When that impact happened, most of Earth's primordial atmosphere was also blasted into space and lost - so if we didn't have the moon, we'd have a much thicker primordial atmosphere, which means it'd take much longer for that to evolve into our secondary atmosphere and possibly the greenhouse effect from the thicker atmosphere would have roasted the planet by now.
Some scientists therefore think that a giant impact is required in order to have a habitable, earth-like surface environment.
As I understand it, that last clause is still very much in the realm of, "but we could be wrong". By which I mean that even if trying to run a hard science Traveller Universe, nobody is going to be able to call "bull" just because your habitable planets don't all have giant moons.
(Though actually, making giant moons a common touch-point for all your habitable worlds is probably more cool than not.)