#2 how much water would Earth have if only Dirac Radioactivity; new monograph-book; "How Earth got most of its water and how Comets get water"
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#2 how much water would Earth have if only Dirac Radioactivity; new monograph-book; "How Earth got most of its water and how Comets get water"         

Group: sci.astro · Group Profile
Author: plutonium.archimedes
Date: Apr 9, 2008 23:44

Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
>
> So it seems we have two big questions to ask:
> (1) water created in the Sun, can it be ejected outwards from the Sun?
> (2) and this ejected water that is not trapped by Earth or
> other planets but makes its way to the Oort Cloud, can that ice
> reformulate
> out there in the Oort Cloud so that it becomes a Cometary ice ball?

To be a good scientist means that you are forever asking more
questions than
ever getting any answers.

Now perhaps we can devise a way of determining what percentage of
Dirac Radioactivities
goes into creating water compared to all the other molecules created.
In an earlier post
I just threw out a rough guess estimate that 1%% of all the molecules
created in a year
by the Sun is water molecules during Dirac Radioactivities. But here I
am offering a
means of making better that estimate. If we compute how much water is
on Earth and
consider that Earth has trapped much of the water that was created on
Mercury and Venus
and alot of the water of the Sun. Of course we subtract the amount of
water created by
Earth itself. And we factor in that amount of water in a cross section
that escapes being
trapped by Earth and thus wanders to Jupiter or gas giant or into the
Oort Cloud.

So we can end up with some numbers of what the Venus water that was
trapped by Earth
and the Mercury water that was trapped by Earth and the Sun's water
that was trapped by
Earth.

So if we can imagine that Sun and Mercury and Venus had Magnetospheres
and where they
lost none of the water that was created and forged by Dirac
Radioactivities, then how much
watery oceans would Mercury and Venus and the Sun possesses if we
ommitted temperature?

Of course Earth would not have its vast and deep Oceans, would it. And
the amount of water
on Mercury and Venus should be roughly the same as Earth. So if we
scooped up 1/3 of all the
water on Earth and placed it on this hypothetical Venus and 1/3 on
hypothetical Mercury, that Earth
would only contain 1/3 of its present day amount of surface water. But
I did not factor in the Sun's
Dirac Radioactivity water amount.

Is there a satellite such as Europa that contains water and would not
be water from outside
sources but water almost totally due to its own Dirac Radioactivity?
So we can use Europa as the
standard measure. And if Europa is 1/2 the age of Earth which is 10
billion years old we need to
multiply the amount of water on Europa by 2 X to give us what should
be a reasonable estimate
of the amount of water on Earth of its own Dirac Radioactivity and no
outside contributions.

Now how much water is twice the amount on Europa? Would it fill the
Atlantic Ocean?

Now if the above is on the true path, then I could use that to compute
how much water the Sun
creates each year via Dirac Radioactivity and calculate how much water
is traversing Earth's path
that comes from the Sun.

I am going to have to go look up how much water is on Europa for I
remember in the 20th century,
many bragging at how much water was on Europa but recently someone
talking about Titan saying
it was the only satellite with water. So I have to get some facts in
order here.

Archimedes Plutonium
www.iw.net/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
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