Actually, if one were to ignite Jupiter, there would be hell to pay. Astronomers would be blinded and it would affect the orbits of the planets. I, for one, would not want to be responsible for explaining why I did it.
Actually, if one were to ignite Jupiter, there would be hell to pay. Astronomers would be blinded and it would affect the orbits of the planets. I, for one, would not want to be responsible for explaining why I did it.
Actually, if one were to ignite Jupiter, there would be hell to pay. Astronomers would be blinded and it would affect the orbits of the planets. I, for one, would not want to be responsible for explaining why I did it.
First off, professional astronomers almost never actually look through telescopes anymore. It's all done with cameras and computers now.
Second, it would have no effect whatsoever on the orbits of the planets. Even if Jupiter's mass were compressed enough to undergo fusion, it would still be the same amount of mass and would have the same gravitational effect on other bodies.
Actually, if one were to ignite Jupiter, there would be hell to pay. Astronomers would be blinded and it would affect the orbits of the planets. I, for one, would not want to be responsible for explaining why I did it.
First off, professional astronomers almost never actually look through telescopes anymore. It's all done with cameras and computers now.
Second, it would have no effect whatsoever on the orbits of the planets. Even if Jupiter's mass were compressed enough to undergo fusion, it would still be the same amount of mass and would have the same gravitational effect on other bodies.
Since that "light and various other forms of radiation" are energy that's energy to has to come from somewhere, from a loss of mass. So, shouldn't The Sun be getting infinitesimally less mass as it goes on?
Sure if Jupiter was "ignited" into fusion and if it's mass is slowly leaking away as various forms of energy it wouldn't be losing its mass at any appreciable rate to make any difference any time soon, but it would be losing mass. Right?
People often misunderstand a fusion reaction as being a naturally escalating or upward-trending reaction like the fast oxidation (combustion) reaction that we are used to, in all its forms - be they a simple slow fire in open air or some semtex/TNT/dynamite exploding.
^Well, why couldn't you? Fusion requires great heat and pressure to be sustained. Take away the heat, by, say, dissipating it in a body of water, and the reaction would die down. After all, nuclear fission reactors are water-cooled. Water has a high heat capacity, making it an excellent working fluid for a coolant system.
I don't think fusion works on the same principals as fission, though.
*heeerrrrrrrmmm BUZZZZZkracklePOPzzzzzzzzffffffffffffffffttttttt*
How about crashing Saturn, Uranus and Neptune into Jupiter first before ignition?
I'm fairly certain that if I had the power to do that, I could find something better to do with it.How about crashing Saturn, Uranus and Neptune into Jupiter first before ignition?
I'm not positive that to thrive an algae population wouldn't need both a substantial presence of carbon dioxide as well as oxygen. CO2 isn't the oxidizer; despite their respiration of CO2 for structural and energy storage, as a eukaryote, most plants nonetheless use molecular oxygen. I don't think they would be able to store the O2 they liberate during photosynthesis, so I think they would fail before conditions reached an optimal level. I mean, algae didn't show up till about a billion years after cyanobacteria.Hm, I seem to recall watching a show about terraforming by introducing increasingly complex plant life. Beginning with something like single-celled algae (which presumably don't need atmo), then moss, and so on.
You can't cool a fission reactor into stopping with water.
Simple nuclear physics my friend, easy to look up and verify. Don't rely on comics and movies for your understanding of How Shit Works.![]()
I doubt it would have much effect on Earth. The planet's pretty far away and just not that big. It'd be dimmer than the moon, I suspect.
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