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The Krakatoa volcanic activity is a great gauge to use on estimating
the Siberian flats and the Deccan flats activities of the Permian and Cretaceous. But we lack a gauge for estimating how much cooler the Sun shines and how much less radiation should a comet stream be swallowed by the Sun. What if Shoemaker-Levy comet stream had been swallowed by the Sun vice Jupiter then would we now have experienced colder winters and cooler summers due to the decrease of Solar radiation as the Sun digests the comet stream? How much of a decrease in Solar Radiation would occur if one of the largest asteroids were swallowed by the Sun? Would Earth then begin a Ice Age? And the big question, what if Mercury were swallowed by the Sun, would that trigger such a loss of Solar Radiation as the Sun cooled down that Earth would begin experiencing mass extinction on the order of the Permian mass extinction where more than 60% of species gone. I do not know if physics has equations for telling how a fusion ball like the Sun would cool down and emit less radiation if a ball were dropped into the fusion fire? I suppose TFTR still operates and can provide some calculations of cool down when a foreign object scaled to the size of Mercury versus Sun were dropped into TFTR. I suppose physics has all sorts of answers as to the cool down of a chemical fire when a cold object is dropped. We can simulate a fusion fire and the dropping of a scaled down Mercury and observe what happens. Has there ever been an astronomical observation of the Sun swallowing massive objects such as a set of comets and has anyone observed whether the Earth cooled down as a result of the Sun cooling down? Another test would be to observe whether a small spacecraft that is swallowed by the Sun actually decreases Solar radiation? Have any of our spacecraft been swallowed by the Sun and any recording of whether the temperature of the Sun lowered and whether Solar radiation decreased? Archimedes Plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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In sci.physics, Archimedes Plutonium
wrote on 11 Aug 2003 02:40:41 -0700 : The Krakatoa volcanic activity is a great gauge to use on estimating the Siberian flats and the Deccan flats activities of the Permian and Cretaceous. But we lack a gauge for estimating how much cooler the Sun shines and how much less radiation should a comet stream be swallowed by the Sun. What if Shoemaker-Levy comet stream had been swallowed by the Sun vice Jupiter then would we now have experienced colder winters and cooler summers due to the decrease of Solar radiation as the Sun digests the comet stream? How much of a decrease in Solar Radiation would occur if one of the largest asteroids were swallowed by the Sun? Would Earth then begin a Ice Age? Good question. Time to crunch a comet -- and some numbers relating thereto. Sun: 1.99 * 10^30 kg. Sun solar output (total): 3.94 * 10^26 W. Sun temperatu 5800 K. Sun radius: 6.95 * 10^8 m. Comet: various but probably a few km in diameter; ice core would probably vaporize near the Sun anyway but let's pretend. OK, 3 km radius comet hurtling towards certain disaster somewhere in the Sun's photosphere. Time to evacuate humanity? 3 km radius, 1.13 * 10^14 m^3 of material. Since ice is 0.92 g/mL, or 920 kg per m^3, we get 1.04 * 10^17 kg. That's quite a bit of ice by Earthly standards, but the Sun would barely notice it, masswise. Now let's vaporize that ice and heat it to 5800 K. We'll assume 0 C, even though this is laughable anyway (quick, how hot is Mercury's day side?). Heat of fusion: 3.33 * 10^5 J/kg, or 3.46 * 10^22 J. Since pressure is very low this is almost immediately followed by heat of vaporization. Heat of vaporization: 2.26 * 10^6 J/kg, or 2.35 * 10^23 J We are now at 373 K at the very most. The specific heat of steam is 2.02 * 10^3 J/kg K. The amount of energy: (5800K - 373K) * (2.02 * 10^3 J/kg K) * 1.04 * 10^17 kg = 1.14E24 J Total: 1.41E24 J. Now, there are some issues with the Sun itself. Were this distributed uniformly across the Sun's surface the Sun might decrease power output for a few microseconds, but it's not. We therefore have to compute the insolation across the comet; as an approximation we merely compare cross-sectional areas at a certain radius. The Sun's total surface area (assuming the Sun is a hot, monstrous billiard ball, which is OK for this problem) is 6.07 * 10^18 m^2. The comet's cross-sectional area is 1/4 its total surface area (area of circle = pi * r^2; area of sphere = 4 * pi * r^2) and is 2.83 * 10^7 m^2. Insolation across that surface area as the comet smacks the billiard ball is (2.83 * 10^7 / 6.07 * 10^18) * 3.94 * 10^26 W = 1.84 * 10^15 W. Comet? What comet? Maybe one might notice something for a significant fraction of a year if one's looking at the right place. It certainly wouldn't cause an Ice Age. [rest crunched as well] -- #191, It's still legal to go .sigless. |
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Stelios Zacharias wrote in message . ..
On 11 Aug 2003 02:40:41 -0700, (Archimedes Plutonium) wrote: And the big question, what if Mercury were swallowed by the Sun, would that trigger such a loss of Solar Radiation as the Sun cooled down that Earth would begin experiencing mass extinction on the order of the Permian mass extinction where more than 60% of species gone. May I? Thanks. The sun is very very big. Comets, spacecraft and Mercury are very very small. The sun is also very very hot. From http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/features...s/sun/sun.html , we get that the sun has a mass of: 1.989 x 10^33 g and a mean temperature of: 5777 K Mercury, from http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/features...y/mercury.html has a mass of: 0.3302 x 10^27 g and a temperature of: 440 K If the sun were a bath-tub of hot water, and mercury an ice-cube, (ie - if we ignore the sun's creation of heat from fusion, etc.) the effect of introducing a body six million times less massive and having a temperature about 13 times less, will reduce the overall temperature of the sun by one 450,000 th - or by 0.0125 K. Not really too much. Comets may be colder than Mercury - but they are a hell of a lot smaller. Even so - let's posit a comet at 10 K but the mass of Mercury, entering the sun. Mass difference remains at about 6 million time, temperature is now 600 times different, thereby reducing the sun's temperature by 0.55 K. Again, a tiny amount - but note that 10 K is very very cold, and a Mercury sized comet is pretty unlikely. Hope this helps. Although not sure what it has got to do with Geology. Cheers, Stelios A good problem thinker and solver does not look at a problem and says to himself what numbers do I crunch in order to get the desired result pleased with at the end. We do not take the case of a bathtub full of boiling water and add one ice cube. We do take the case of a fusion tokamak where you enter into the hot plasma a BB sized object and see how much of the temperature drops. The proper analogy for the Sun is that of a hot outdoor barbeque grill with its hot charcoal. Now, if you drop some ashes from a cigarette or cigar onto the hot charcoal it will cool them slightly. That is probably what happens in the daily swallowing up by the Sun of dust and debris in its daily traverse. But, now, if you drop the ashes of an ashtray into the charcoal it is going to cool them down considerably. So if Mercury is swallowed by the Sun and given the huge amount of metal that Mercury contains then the heat of the Sun will vaporize some of that metal and Mercury will act like that ashtray of many ashes dropped into a charcoal barbecue grill. If a large metallic asteroid was swallowed by the Sun would also decrease the Sun temperature considerably. Archimedes Plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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The Ghost In The Machine wrote in message ...
In sci.physics, Archimedes Plutonium wrote on 11 Aug 2003 02:40:41 -0700 : The Krakatoa volcanic activity is a great gauge to use on estimating the Siberian flats and the Deccan flats activities of the Permian and Cretaceous. But we lack a gauge for estimating how much cooler the Sun shines and how much less radiation should a comet stream be swallowed by the Sun. What if Shoemaker-Levy comet stream had been swallowed by the Sun vice Jupiter then would we now have experienced colder winters and cooler summers due to the decrease of Solar radiation as the Sun digests the comet stream? How much of a decrease in Solar Radiation would occur if one of the largest asteroids were swallowed by the Sun? Would Earth then begin a Ice Age? Good question. Time to crunch a comet -- and some numbers relating thereto. Sun: 1.99 * 10^30 kg. Sun solar output (total): 3.94 * 10^26 W. Sun temperatu 5800 K. Sun radius: 6.95 * 10^8 m. Comet: various but probably a few km in diameter; ice core would probably vaporize near the Sun anyway but let's pretend. OK, 3 km radius comet hurtling towards certain disaster somewhere in the Sun's photosphere. Time to evacuate humanity? 3 km radius, 1.13 * 10^14 m^3 of material. Since ice is 0.92 g/mL, or 920 kg per m^3, we get 1.04 * 10^17 kg. That's quite a bit of ice by Earthly standards, but the Sun would barely notice it, masswise. Now let's vaporize that ice and heat it to 5800 K. We'll assume 0 C, even though this is laughable anyway (quick, how hot is Mercury's day side?). Heat of fusion: 3.33 * 10^5 J/kg, or 3.46 * 10^22 J. Since pressure is very low this is almost immediately followed by heat of vaporization. Heat of vaporization: 2.26 * 10^6 J/kg, or 2.35 * 10^23 J We are now at 373 K at the very most. The specific heat of steam is 2.02 * 10^3 J/kg K. The amount of energy: (5800K - 373K) * (2.02 * 10^3 J/kg K) * 1.04 * 10^17 kg = 1.14E24 J Total: 1.41E24 J. Now, there are some issues with the Sun itself. Were this distributed uniformly across the Sun's surface the Sun might decrease power output for a few microseconds, but it's not. We therefore have to compute the insolation across the comet; as an approximation we merely compare cross-sectional areas at a certain radius. The Sun's total surface area (assuming the Sun is a hot, monstrous billiard ball, which is OK for this problem) is 6.07 * 10^18 m^2. The comet's cross-sectional area is 1/4 its total surface area (area of circle = pi * r^2; area of sphere = 4 * pi * r^2) and is 2.83 * 10^7 m^2. Insolation across that surface area as the comet smacks the billiard ball is (2.83 * 10^7 / 6.07 * 10^18) * 3.94 * 10^26 W = 1.84 * 10^15 W. Comet? What comet? Maybe one might notice something for a significant fraction of a year if one's looking at the right place. It certainly wouldn't cause an Ice Age. [rest crunched as well] Like the other poster, it seems as though before you wrote your reply you had your mind made up as to what the end result you like it to be and give numbers for that conclusion. Where you should start at is Tokamak fusion plasma machines and how much they are affected by a single BB entered into the chamber once it is at peak temperatures. It affects it so much that the Tokamak temperature drops by more than 1/2. I am not saying that a comet plunging into the Sun is going to drop the Sun's radiation by 1/2. What I am saying is that if you plunge a heavy metal asteroid or the planet Mercury into the Sun and as the sun melts and vaporizes that metal it begins to gum up the Sun's interior fusion nuclear furnace. And although it may not drop the Solar radiation by 1/2 which all the metal of Mercury could possible achieve. Anyway, such a physical act is way more than enough to drop the Sun's temperature and create a global Ice Age on Earth. Shoemaker-Levy was not metallic and was small compared to say the largest metallic asteroid. You should redo your calculations with a large metallic asteroid and once it plunges into the Sun compute its melting and then vaporization as to gumming up the Sun's interior to the point where it interfers with the fusion of hydrogen and once this cooling of the Sun begins then it has a rippling cascade effect upon other fusion processes such that the Solar Radiation is significantly cut. Archimedes Plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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![]() "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message m... The Ghost In The Machine wrote in message ... Stop this crap. You have no idea what you are talking about! Comets strike the sun many times during the year. They have no effect whatsoever on the sun's output. Go find a career in a field about which you actually know something and stop posting these troll messages. |
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![]() "Bored Huge Krill" wrote in message ... a side question: I'd seen an earlier post in this thread suggesting that the Sun in fact swallows many comets. I'm curious as to why that should be. Because there are a lot of comets that we didn't know about until the SOHO satellite was put up. It monitors the sun constantly. It has spotted many comets striking the sun. http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/gallery/LASCO/ |
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George,
thanks for the reply. Actually, I wasn't questioning that such impacts occur, rather I wanted to understand the mechanics that might cause them to happen. Are comets typically interacting significantly with other bodies besides the Sun? Regards Krill "George" wrote in message news ![]() "Bored Huge Krill" wrote in message ... a side question: I'd seen an earlier post in this thread suggesting that the Sun in fact swallows many comets. I'm curious as to why that should be. Because there are a lot of comets that we didn't know about until the SOHO satellite was put up. It monitors the sun constantly. It has spotted many comets striking the sun. http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/gallery/LASCO/ |
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The least said in this case the better...
It is like spitting against a strong wind... Regards, Joe Rat George wrote in message ... "Archimedes Plutonium" wrote in message m... The Ghost In The Machine wrote in message ... Stop this crap. You have no idea what you are talking about! Comets strike the sun many times during the year. They have no effect whatsoever on the sun's output. Go find a career in a field about which you actually know something and stop posting these troll messages. |
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