Current Events > Scenario: Scientists find a planet made entirely out of water.

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Duncanwii
02/23/18 11:05:43 AM
#1:


Like you know how there are gas giants? Well this is a water giant. Millions of gallons of H20 held in place by gravity. Also the water is sterile since it, unfortunately, has no life on it. Is the water shortage over?
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Bio1590
02/23/18 11:10:08 AM
#2:


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Johnny_Nutcase
02/23/18 11:10:49 AM
#3:


What water shortage?

*continues to leave the faucet on*
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Squall28
02/23/18 11:11:57 AM
#4:


Pretty sure it's be easier to clean our own water than to get it from another planet...
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DarkChozoGhost
02/23/18 11:12:53 AM
#5:


No
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Patchwork
02/23/18 11:13:28 AM
#6:


I bet webbed-feet Kevin Costner is there.
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CableZL
02/23/18 11:13:53 AM
#7:


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LordRazziel
02/23/18 11:15:37 AM
#8:


You make the strangest topics.
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Duncanwii
02/23/18 11:20:11 AM
#9:


Bio1590 posted...
https://gizmodo.com/5887003/hubble-discovers-a-new-type-of-world-made-of-water


That's wow. Could we get water from it? And what about that hot ice what's that about?
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 11:30:14 AM
#10:


Duncanwii posted...
Bio1590 posted...
https://gizmodo.com/5887003/hubble-discovers-a-new-type-of-world-made-of-water


That's wow. Could we get water from it? And what about that hot ice what's that about?

Don't even know where the planet is, but that should be an obvious "no".
The hot ice is because of the high pressure on the planet.
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Alexanaxela
02/23/18 11:31:38 AM
#11:


... when you say "water" you mean "ice" right? Cause a blob of ice isn't a planet it needs a core
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JE19426
02/23/18 11:39:31 AM
#12:


Duncanwii posted...
Like you know how there are gas giants? Well this is a water giant.


So it's not entirely made of water?
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 11:44:11 AM
#13:


Alexanaxela posted...
... when you say "water" you mean "ice" right? Cause a blob of ice isn't a planet it needs a core

Jupiter is a planet.
They're pretty sure it doesn't have a solid core.
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JE19426
02/23/18 12:31:11 PM
#14:


LordRazziel posted...
Jupiter is a planet.
They're pretty sure it doesn't have a solid core.


You'd be wrong. It has a rocky core.
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Kombucha
02/23/18 12:33:35 PM
#15:


wow i never thought of it that way thanks tc
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 12:35:04 PM
#16:


JE19426 posted...
LordRazziel posted...
Jupiter is a planet.
They're pretty sure it doesn't have a solid core.


You'd be wrong. It has a rocky core.

Source?
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ROBANN_88
02/23/18 12:35:58 PM
#17:


Duncanwii posted...
Is the water shortage over?


wat?
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Ricemills
02/23/18 12:36:09 PM
#18:


CableZL posted...
Sounds like that planet needs some freedom


nah, a planet made entirely from oil do.
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YOUHAVENOHOPE
02/23/18 12:36:23 PM
#19:


LordRazziel posted...
JE19426 posted...
LordRazziel posted...
Jupiter is a planet.
They're pretty sure it doesn't have a solid core.


You'd be wrong. It has a rocky core.

Source?

Jupiter probably does not have a solid core. Jupiters core contains some rock and hydrogen metals. Scientists can not be 100 percent certain if deep within the planet there is a solid core or not, but based on gravitational measurements compared with Earths, the best educated guesses possible based on those measurements say there is no solid core. Those measurements make them think that the core is a thick, super hot soup.

Jupiter's composition is more of a mystery than anything else. The accepted theory holds that it consists of a dense core made of a mixture of elements, the core is thought to be surrounded by a layer of liquid metallic hydrogen and helium, then the outer layer is to be dominated by molecular hydrogen.Dec 18, 2009
Jupiter's Core - Universe Today
https://www.universetoday.com/47966/jupiters-core/

**so you're both kinda wrong

***sorry i re-read your post razziel; HE's wrong, at least in theory
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chill02
02/23/18 12:37:03 PM
#20:


California needs this
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Mist_Turnips
02/23/18 12:38:12 PM
#21:


I wanna be the first man to piss in all that alien water.
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#22
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 12:38:32 PM
#23:


YOUHAVENOHOPE posted...
LordRazziel posted...
JE19426 posted...
LordRazziel posted...
Jupiter is a planet.
They're pretty sure it doesn't have a solid core.


You'd be wrong. It has a rocky core.

Source?

Jupiter probably does not have a solid core. Jupiters core contains some rock and hydrogen metals. Scientists can not be 100 percent certain if deep within the planet there is a solid core or not, but based on gravitational measurements compared with Earths, the best educated guesses possible based on those measurements say there is no solid core. Those measurements make them think that the core is a thick, super hot soup.

Jupiter's composition is more of a mystery than anything else. The accepted theory holds that it consists of a dense core made of a mixture of elements, the core is thought to be surrounded by a layer of liquid metallic hydrogen and helium, then the outer layer is to be dominated by molecular hydrogen.Dec 18, 2009
Jupiter's Core - Universe Today
https://www.universetoday.com/47966/jupiters-core/

**so you're both kinda wrong

First sentence in your source.

Jupiter probably does not have a solid core. Jupiters core contains some rock and hydrogen metals. Scientists can not be 100 percent certain if deep within the planet there is a solid core or not, but based on gravitational measurements compared with Earths, the best educated guesses possible based on those measurements say there is no solid core. Those measurements make them think that the core is a thick, super hot soup.
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YOUHAVENOHOPE
02/23/18 12:38:44 PM
#24:


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JE19426
02/23/18 12:38:51 PM
#25:


Looks like I misread NASA's page. They only believe it has a rocky core, not that it has one for certain.
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YOUHAVENOHOPE
02/23/18 12:39:46 PM
#26:


JE19426 posted...
Looks like I misread NASA's page. They only believe it has a rocky core, not that it has one for certain.

hm so nasa says maybe its rocky

universetoday says maybe its dense and liquidy

so nobody knows
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#27
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Silver Bearings
02/23/18 12:41:07 PM
#28:


Duncanwii posted...
Millions of gallons of H20

You do know that the 'O' in H-2-O, is actually an 'O' for Oxygen and not a zero. That would be H-twenty which doesn't exist.
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Solar_Crimson
02/23/18 12:41:12 PM
#29:


Squall28 posted...
Pretty sure it's be easier to clean our own water than to get it from another planet...

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LordRazziel
02/23/18 12:46:07 PM
#30:


JE19426 posted...
Looks like I misread NASA's page. They only believe it has a rocky core, not that it has one for certain.

Can't see that. What I do see is.

The core temperature may be about 24,000 degrees Celsius (43,000 degrees Fahrenheit).

https://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/5-8/features/nasa-knows/what-is-jupiter-58.html

Seems too hot for a rocky core.
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teepan95
02/23/18 12:57:36 PM
#31:


Now I really wanna figure out what such a planet would be like
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CableZL
02/23/18 12:58:24 PM
#32:


LordRazziel posted...
JE19426 posted...
Looks like I misread NASA's page. They only believe it has a rocky core, not that it has one for certain.

Can't see that. What I do see is.

The core temperature may be about 24,000 degrees Celsius (43,000 degrees Fahrenheit).

https://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/5-8/features/nasa-knows/what-is-jupiter-58.html

Seems too hot for a rocky core.


Jupiter fuel can't melt rocky beams
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teepan95
02/23/18 1:08:45 PM
#33:


The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point
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teepan95
02/23/18 4:05:50 PM
#34:


teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(
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CableZL
02/23/18 4:12:16 PM
#35:


teepan95 posted...
teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(

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teepan95
02/23/18 4:13:10 PM
#36:


CableZL posted...
teepan95 posted...
teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(

sDqYZje oFclszE e2dmZEm qLfV9xH AynhRXu CZZPTaP

thank you
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ROBANN_88
02/23/18 4:45:34 PM
#37:


teepan95 posted...
teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(


is water pressure calculated the same way on different planets, with different gravities, and different atmospheres?
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Dark_SilverX
02/23/18 4:51:11 PM
#38:


teepan95 posted...
teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(


Thank you baby girl
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 8:52:16 PM
#40:


@teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

Isn't water noncompressible?
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Hexagon
02/23/18 9:06:25 PM
#41:


Incompressible means that a small change in specific volume is caused by a very large pressure change. That means enough pressure and water will indeed compress.
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 9:26:32 PM
#42:


Hexagon posted...
Incompressible means that a small change in specific volume is caused by a very large pressure change. That means enough pressure and water will indeed compress.

So incompressible means hard to compress?
They should call it something else.
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 9:29:52 PM
#43:


Thinking on it, I should have known that. It boils at different temperatures at different heights.
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Hexagon
02/23/18 9:31:27 PM
#44:


LordRazziel posted...
Hexagon posted...
Incompressible means that a small change in specific volume is caused by a very large pressure change. That means enough pressure and water will indeed compress.

So incompressible means hard to compress?
They should call it something else.


Well to increase the pressure of a gas in a pipeline typically they use compressors. It's a well known fact that if you pass water or any liquid through a compressor, you are guaranteed to break the compressor. I guess that's where the name incompressible comes from...
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#45
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LordRazziel
02/23/18 9:35:06 PM
#46:


Hexagon posted...
LordRazziel posted...
Hexagon posted...
Incompressible means that a small change in specific volume is caused by a very large pressure change. That means enough pressure and water will indeed compress.

So incompressible means hard to compress?
They should call it something else.


Well to increase the pressure of a gas in a pipeline typically they use compressors. It's a well known fact that if you pass water or any liquid through a compressor, you are guaranteed to break the compressor. I guess that's where the name incompressible comes from...

That makes sense.
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Kineth
02/23/18 9:36:29 PM
#47:


The only life there is Kevin Costner.
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Shotgunnova
02/23/18 9:48:46 PM
#48:


Duncanwii posted...
Also the water is sterile since it, unfortunately, has no life on it.
You can't have a water world without Jeanne Tripplehorn, though.
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teepan95
02/24/18 12:34:59 AM
#49:


ROBANN_88 posted...
teepan95 posted...
teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(


is water pressure calculated the same way on different planets, with different gravities, and different atmospheres?

I calculated the local gravity first using Newton's formula. It came out to around 1.8m/s/s
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Complete_Idi0t
02/24/18 12:37:56 AM
#50:


I don't know about entirely made of water, but they already found lots of moons that are mostly made out of water. It's not like water is incredibly rare.
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CarlGrimes
02/24/18 12:45:48 AM
#51:


CableZL posted...
teepan95 posted...
teepan95 posted...
The pressure in the core of such a planet would be of the order of 10^26 Pa

P sure the water would solidify at this point

I did not sit my ass down and calculate this for CE to ignore it :(

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