Hey clever Beex peeps, help a hapless old wannabee out here please?
Loads of things perplex me in real life (no, not going to the toilet), but science type stuff more than most. Some things just don't seem to make any sense whatsoever to me.
Astronomy has long held a fascination for me personally, from the earliest possible age. I was painting Red Giant stars in reception class (well, "Red Gant" IIRC, my spelling hasn't progressed much), when all the other kids were rendering mummy and daddy. Yeah, sad I know. Anyway, there are so many things I could ask, but to kick things off (hopefully
), there is one matter that springs to mind.
1. Venusian Atmosphere
We're always being told that the Earth relies heavily on its magnetic field (and hence active, liquid metallic core) to avoid high energy cosmic rays from the sun gradually pinging off (yep, that's a technical term) the atmosphere. Seems fair enough to me; the physics isn't difficult to understand (at my elementary level), and Mars is often cited as what happens if there's an absence of this magnetic field. (We're told that in the case of Mars, the CO2 atmosphere is only c.1% that of the Earth's in barometric pressure terms, but that it once held a much thicker atmosphere sufficient to allow liquid water to exist on the surface and had an active core). I appreciate, of course, that Mars has a rather lower mass than the Earth, which does account for the thinner atmosphere to some extent, but that mass must've by definition been sufficient to capture and retain the once thicker atmosphere, and it's hardly as though Mars has lost any of its mass. After all, plenty of Jovian and other gas giant moons of comparable or less mass have thick atmospheres (e.g. Titan).
So far, so good. But, Venus has a super-thick largely CO2 atmosphere that's 90 times the barometric pressure of the Earth (and hence fully 9,000 times that of Mars), despite having no more mass than the Earth, and most crucially of all - no magnetic field to speak of AND it is much closer to the Sun (and hence those nasty cosmic rays).
How is this possible? One would surely expect Venus to lose its atmosphere in short order?
Hmmm.
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Beware of gavia articulata oculos...
Dr Lave wrote:
Of course, he's normally wrong but
interestingly wrong