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Besides something nuclear going on, what's keeping the core and
subsequently the surface of a given planet like Earth so extra active and getting warmer by the day? Like Jupiter, does pressure alone give the necessary method of sustaining a core at a given geothermal sustainable status? What's the gravity or perhaps the vacuum at the center of Earth? In other words, without an active and extremely fluid core, and especially if without benefit of such a massive and nearby moon, why wouldn't this planet of ours become that of a mostly monoseason and somewhat icy environment? It seems Mars is not only worse off than icy, as likely a planetology that's dead to the core, but also having once been a mostly freshwater environment (Mars w/o salt), and otherwise seemingly older than Earth. What gives? Venus is still very much alive and kicking from the inside out, and w/ o moon none the less, as it's losing geothermal energy at roughly 256 fold greater than Earth. What gives? - Brad Guth |
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Good grief, what another pathetic infomercial old joke, with our warm
and fuzzy NASA in full infomercial media damage-control, once again via hype diverting us away from the truth by simply pretending at their doing a Venus mission, and with such old file copy tactics none the less. However, unlike our moon, at least Venus is technically doable from the toasty surface on up into those icy cool though acidic nighttime clouds. Up, Up and Away -- To Venus (aka: on the dirt cheap) http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/...-20070827.html http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/1...-07-browse.jpg "This was one of the surprises of the Vega balloon mission the Soviet Union flew more than two decades ago," Baines said. "Enormous gravity waves appear to rise up more than 30 miles into the upper atmosphere, causing unexpected depositions of energy generated at the surface and producing strong vertical movements of air. We want to ride these waves, measuring their effect on Venus' bizarre high-speed winds." "Enormous gravity waves" ??? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_wave "In fluid dynamics, gravity waves are waves generated in a fluid medium or at the interface between two mediums (e.g. the atmosphere or ocean) which has the restoring force of gravity or buoyancy." But otherwise, no kidding folks, because of the newish planetology with all that CO2 as saturated with S8, being so much hotter near that grothermally active surface, is clearly why there's such a terrific vertical thermal differential and subsequent velocity, as well as downright nifty buoyancy to that robust atmosphere. Instead of going with that silly balloon, a composite rigid airship would be far better and longer lasting, as well as capable of cruising extensively to within a few km of that toasty deck. "It's about the same size as our planet, but the surface is about 900 degrees Fahrenheit, and we want to find out why." Much like good old proto-Earth, in places it's clearly much hotter than in other places. (think: newish planetology) (think: much less old than Earth) Think outside the mainstream status quo box, because there's sufficient proof of intelligent other life existing/coexisting on Venus. There's also insufficient proof that either Venus or Earth fit within the popular mold of our solar system, and quite possibly either of us were not originally associated within this solar system because, it's becoming better understood that rogue planets do exist, especially those of good volume and mass as having Earth like moons that survived the demise of their original sun. BTW, the extremely mountainous terrain of Venus suggest that it once upon a time had a fairly substantial moon, perhaps exactly like that moon of ours, as perhaps being the primary reason as to why Venus remained so extra geothermal from the inside out. These days, Venus is cooling off at roughly 20.5 w/m2 (in spite of that insulative atmosphere, it's losing an impressive 256 fold greater thermal energy than what Earth is losing). http://ees.elsevier.com/jasr/ "Advances in Space Research is the Official Journal of the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR), a Scientific Committee of the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU)" is nothing but another insider journal dump, of self promoting e-published hype at taxpayers expense, on just about anything you'd care to find. Peer reviewed, my ass, as only that which doesn't rock thy good ship LOLLIPOP is allowed to stick. Their peer review simply means revisionism of any kind is forbidden, and nothing gets interconnected, meaning that each research topic has to be a *stand alone* or all inclusive item without ties or links to other research (aka: no dot connecting allowed). - Brad Guth |
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