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I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us
magma and magma is not chemical. In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. Jon Riley Toronto |
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granite stone wrote:
I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. Uh, where do I start? First the Moon and Earth's mantle. What you're talking about is tidal heating. Typically tidal heating is more pronounced when a larger body tugs on a smaller body, with a big size ratio between them. Your example of the tidal forces on Saturn's moon, Io, is an example of that. Saturn pulls on Io's crust and mantle and heats it up, but Io's tidal forces on Saturn are puny by comparison. Similarly the Moon's tidal forces on Earth are puny, and don't cause much heating in its mantle or anywhere else. Earth's tidal forces on the Moon are much more substantial, but still not substantial enough to create volcanism on the Moon. Most of Earth's heating comes internally from its own nuclear fission core. Earth's iron core is suffused with large quantities of uranium. The Sun doesn't have a mantle. A mantle is a layer within a solid planet between the crust and the core of that planet. What one might call a mantle for the Sun would be its convection layer. The Sun doesn't have a crust or a mantle, but it does have a core. The core of the Sun is where nuclear fusion takes place, just like the core of the Earth is where nuclear fission takes place. The nuclear fuel at the core is the main source of heat for stars and planets. Yousuf Khan |
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On Nov 15, 7:57*pm, granite stone wrote:
I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. *In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. *Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. *If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. Jon Riley Toronto Our moon contributes 2e20 N/sec, at least some of which causes tidal heating. ~ BG |
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On Nov 15, 11:00*pm, Yousuf Khan wrote:
granite stone wrote: I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. *In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. *Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. *If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. Uh, where do I start? First the Moon and Earth's mantle. What you're talking about is tidal heating. Typically tidal heating is more pronounced when a larger body tugs on a smaller body, with a big size ratio between them. Our moon contributes 2e20 N/sec. (that's only 55.5e12 KW) Your example of the tidal forces on Saturn's moon, Io, is an example of that. Saturn pulls on Io's crust and mantle and heats it up, but Io's tidal forces on Saturn are puny by comparison. Similarly the Moon's tidal forces on Earth are puny, and don't cause much heating in its mantle or anywhere else. Earth's tidal forces on the Moon are much more substantial, but still not substantial enough to create volcanism on the Moon. Most of Earth's heating comes internally from its own nuclear fission core. Earth's iron core is suffused with large quantities of uranium. Make that include thorium. The Sun doesn't have a mantle. A mantle is a layer within a solid planet between the crust and the core of that planet. What one might call a mantle for the Sun would be its convection layer. The Sun doesn't have a crust or a mantle, but it does have a core. The core of the Sun is where nuclear fusion takes place, just like the core of the Earth is where nuclear fission takes place. The nuclear fuel at the core is the main source of heat for stars and planets. * * * * Yousuf Khan |
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Yousuf Khan wrote:
granite stone wrote: I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. Uh, where do I start? First the Moon and Earth's mantle. What you're talking about is tidal heating. Typically tidal heating is more pronounced when a larger body tugs on a smaller body, with a big size ratio between them. Your example of the tidal forces on Saturn's moon, Io, is an example of that. Saturn pulls on Io's crust and mantle and heats it up, but Io's tidal forces on Saturn are puny by comparison. Similarly the Moon's tidal forces on Earth are puny, and don't cause much heating in its mantle or anywhere else. Earth's tidal forces on the Moon are much more substantial, but still not substantial enough to create volcanism on the Moon. Most of Earth's heating comes internally from its own nuclear fission core. Earth's iron core is suffused with large quantities of uranium. Since the Moon is tidally locked to the Earth (one side always faces the Earth), there's not much in the way of tidal heating going on, as there is little flexure apart from the small amount due to libration. The Earth's core itself is unlikely to contain much in the way of uranium or potassium, they being locked up in siderophobic compounds distributed thoughout the rest of the bulk of the planet. The Sun doesn't have a mantle. A mantle is a layer within a solid planet between the crust and the core of that planet. What one might call a mantle for the Sun would be its convection layer. The Sun doesn't have a crust or a mantle, but it does have a core. The core of the Sun is where nuclear fusion takes place, just like the core of the Earth is where nuclear fission takes place. The nuclear fuel at the core is the main source of heat for stars and planets. Consider also that the total mechanical energy available from the orbits of all the planets is about 6 x 10^35 Joules. That's what you could extract if every planet's orbit were to decay due to tidal friction in the Sun and end up falling in. The Sun produces about 1.2 x 10^34 Joules/year of energy, so using up all of the planet's energies would power the Sun for less than 50 years. |
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On Nov 16, 1:00 am, Yousuf Khan wrote:
granite stone wrote: I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. Uh, where do I start? First the Moon and Earth's mantle. What you're talking about is tidal heating. Typically tidal heating is more pronounced when a larger body tugs on a smaller body, with a big size ratio between them. Your example of the tidal forces on Saturn's moon, Io, is an example of that. Saturn pulls on Io's crust and mantle and heats it up, but Io's tidal forces on Saturn are puny by comparison. Similarly the Moon's tidal forces on Earth are puny, and don't cause much heating in its mantle or anywhere else. Earth's tidal forces on the Moon are much more substantial, but still not substantial enough to create volcanism on the Moon. Most of Earth's heating comes internally from its own nuclear fission core. Earth's iron core is suffused with large quantities of uranium. The Sun doesn't have a mantle. A mantle is a layer within a solid planet between the crust and the core of that planet. What one might call a mantle for the Sun would be its convection layer. The Sun doesn't have a crust or a mantle, but it does have a core. The core of the Sun is where nuclear fusion takes place, just like the core of the Earth is where nuclear fission takes place. The nuclear fuel at the core is the main source of heat for stars and planets. Yousuf Khan The reason volcanism is not on the moon is that the moon does not rotate with reference to earth. And it would have to rotate at a high speed too. |
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Yousuf Khan wrote:
granite stone wrote: I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. You fail to notice, that the energy from tidal heating can be anything from considerable (like Jupiter's effect on Io), over negligible (Moon's effect on Earth) to ridiculous (*any* other body's effect on our Sun). Uh, where do I start? First the Moon and Earth's mantle. What you're talking about is tidal heating. Typically tidal heating is more pronounced when a larger body tugs on a smaller body, with a big size ratio between them. Your example of the tidal forces on Saturn's moon, Io, is an example of that. Saturn pulls on Io's crust and mantle and heats it up, but Io's tidal forces on Saturn are puny by comparison. Similarly the Moon's tidal forces on Earth are puny, and don't cause much heating in its mantle or anywhere else. Earth's tidal forces on the Moon are much more substantial, but still not substantial enough to create volcanism on the Moon. Most of Earth's heating comes internally from its own nuclear fission core. Earth's iron core is suffused with large quantities of uranium. No - it's not fission. Uranium - as well as thorium and potassium generate heat through radioactive decay, which is not the same as fission. Fission is one kind of radioactive decay, but it's very rare in nature, including Earth's core - unless you count alpha decay as fission. Also, U, Th and K are not only present in the core, but throughout the planet, though the heavier elements may be more concentrated in the core. The Sun doesn't have a mantle. A mantle is a layer within a solid planet between the crust and the core of that planet. What one might call a mantle for the Sun would be its convection layer. The Sun doesn't have a crust or a mantle, but it does have a core. The core of the Sun is where nuclear fusion takes place, just like the core of the Earth is where nuclear fission takes place. The nuclear fuel at the core is the main source of heat for stars and planets. Yousuf Khan As I said there fisson is negligible - the fraction is much less than 0.1% of the radioactive decay energy. And the decay takes place throughout the planet. There has been one known occurance of natural fission, not in the core, but in ore deposits in Gabon, around 2 billion years ago. Google "fission reactor Oklo" to read more about this. Probably the radition disaster in Tjeljabinsk, Russia was also a result of a spontaneous fission reaction, though hardly natural, as it took place in a nuclear waste deposit. -- I recommend Macs to my friends, and Windows machines to those whom I don't mind billing by the hour |
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![]() ""Anders Eklöf"" wrote in message ... Yousuf Khan wrote: granite stone wrote: I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. You fail to notice, that the energy from tidal heating can be anything from considerable (like Jupiter's effect on Io), over negligible (Moon's effect on Earth) to ridiculous (*any* other body's effect on our Sun). You fail to notice that the energy from tidal heating can be anything from considerable (like Jupiter's effect on Io), to VERY CONSIDERABLE (Moon's effect on Earth, causing vulcanism and earthquakes). Just because the water moves doesn't mean the crust does not. This is EXACTLY the same process as Jupiter's effect on Io. |
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#10
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On Nov 17, 1:03*pm, "Androcles" wrote:
""Anders Eklöf"" wrote in message ... Yousuf Khan wrote: granite stone wrote: I read an article that the moon's force on the mantle might give us magma and magma is not chemical. *In the same way some of the larger planets may have a pull on our sun's mantle giving us solar radiation. *Since the sun spins every 6 days the spin travels through the pull on the sun's mantle, energy, huge amounts of it, is given off. *If all stars are suns, you could say each star has planet pulling on each sun's mantle. Google Tidal Forces Io and lots come up from NASA. You fail to notice, that the energy from tidal heating can be anything from considerable (like Jupiter's effect on Io), over negligible (Moon's effect on Earth) to ridiculous (*any* other body's effect on our Sun). You fail to notice that the energy from tidal heating can be anything from considerable (like Jupiter's effect on Io), to VERY CONSIDERABLE (Moon's effect on Earth, causing vulcanism and earthquakes). Just because the water moves doesn't mean the crust does not. This is EXACTLY the same process as Jupiter's effect on Io. That's 100% correct. Our Selene/moon is by far the most considerable influence upon its planet Earth, than any other planet/moon ratio. 2e20 N/sec of interactive tidal force has been directly heating Earth to its core for quite some time (at least for the past 12,600 some odd years). ~ BG |
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