Mercury May Have Molten Hot Magma at its Core 120
mattatwork writes "According to ScienceDaily, NASA has come to the conclusion that the planet Mercury may have a molten core after all, based on high-precision planetary radar readings. You may (or may not) remember the Mariner 10 probe making 3 passes by Mercury between March 29th, 1974, September 21st 1974 and March 16, 1975."
neat (Score:4, Funny)
Excellent. This means they'll be able to serve McDonald's apple pies when they put the first restaurant on Mercury.
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Re:neat (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:neat (Score:5, Funny)
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The 'food' (if you can call it that) at McDonalds is a joke by itself
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my 2c,
-manno
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I think you just figured out what the secret ingredient is.
Their menu consists solely of varying proportions of salt, sugar, soy protein, various starches, chemicals and oils extracted from corn, "beef products", "chicken products", and hydrogenated oils (synthetic fat). It tastes like it too. So some random petroleum derived-hydrocarbons would probably improve the taste a bit.
6 chicken nuggets with Exxon
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Hmm, Mercury Bar (Score:5, Funny)
No more hard frozen Mars Bars. Let the chocolatey warmth flow through you.
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Mag-ma!
I am quite surprised that this article wasn't taged "frickin lasers" or "sharks".
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Really? (Score:2, Funny)
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In that case the temperature would be the relative term. The water is, of course, molten (in the sense of "made liquid by heat", which I think is the most common), so there is no relative use of the word there. Besides: Come on, cold magma? We might as well extract some of it to cool our beers once we g
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What? Are you not human?
Do you mean to imply there is some other subjective perspective we should be taking in describing our existence/world/experience (such as describing planets)?
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Were you expecting someone to answer "no"? Even on Slashdot, that seems to be an odd question to ask someone else... :-)
Do you mean to imply there is some other subjective perspective we should be taking in describing our existence/world/experience (such as describing planets)?
Sure. Try using your imagination.
If that doesn't work out, try listening to Terrence McKenna with DMT.
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rj
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Good news for us I guess... (Score:1)
I do not know much about this, but is it possible Mercury would always have a molten core just do the extremes it endures (gravity, radiation, cosmic whatever, etc). If true, then my above statement is holds no value.
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elliptic baby, orbits are elliptic.
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When the planet is rotating, the tidal force axis swings around all longitudes during the day and it's as if the sun were rolling the planet between its fingers. It gets squashed and
Re:Good news for us I guess... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Good news for us I guess... (Score:4, Informative)
I forgot my Mercury trivia; they used to think it was locked [nature.com] before they found the 3/2 resonance. Since the resonance is stable, rotational energy is not being affected anymore. But then that means tidal forces are still heating Mercury over a 1400 hour cycle. The heat loss from friction is probably coming out of the orbital energy making the orbit unstable.
And even more, an ocean does not act as any sort of a buffer against gravitational forces from the sun. There's just not a significant enough amount of water even on Earth to do so.
OK, so the water transmits zero torque until there's how much of it then?
Most of the torque being applied to slow the earth down is transmitted at two hydrosphere/lithosphere boundaries: the one between the inner and outer core, and the one between the crust and the oceans. This is because unlike solid rock, fluids are free to slosh around horizontally. The outer core has more mass but the moment arm and surface area are both bigger for the oceanic boundary.
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OK, so the water transmits zero torque until there's how much of it then?
Oh come on, you made a stupid claim. There's no "cushion" to solar torque (well perhaps a couple of minor ones). The bedrock experiences as much tidal force as before. And since it is around 8000 miles thick and about a factor of five denser than ocean, the counterforce from the slightly higher water levels isn't relevant. The other effect is that the rotation is slowed somewhat more than it would otherwise be which reduces the fre
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"I suppose the longer Mercury can hold out as an active planet, the longer will should last as one... assuming we make it that far..."
This may change some of the basic assumptions we have regarding planet formation and tectonic activity. Terrestrial/rocky planets start out molten due to heat of accretion and differentiate as they cool. In a way, the Earth and now apparently Mercury are actually still forming because they are partially molten.
An example of a completely cooled-off, solidified planet would be Mars. It was generally thought that Mars is no longer tectonically active - no long molten in the middle - because it is smalle
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Even if this is true, however, intuitively speaking, it kinda doesn't seem like it would be enough to keep the core act
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But is it as 'cool' as "Hot Jupiters !!!" ? (Score:2)
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Tautology (Score:5, Funny)
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well...no (Score:2)
What is water but liquid ice?
If I was on a planet far awa frmo the sune, all the ice would be no different then rock. In fact, On that planet the rock could be magma at 0 Centigrade.
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Being liquid is not subjective.
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There, I fixed that for you.
liquid core but little magnetism (Score:5, Insightful)
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Heres a short blurb which mentions that Mercury probably has a molten core written in 2003, http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/mercury/Ma
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Maybe. Mercury's mantle maximises magnitism at the Mohovoric median, meaning magma must melt marginally at most.
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Length of day (hrs): 4222.6
Source: NASA [nasa.gov]
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I think the landers should be lightweight vehicles with only a few experiments. The bulk constitution of the surface should tell us a lot about the core.
Magma in Mercury... (Score:4, Funny)
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RS
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Magma... (Score:4, Funny)
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OK fine, so I'm just bitter you got to it first.
The Jokes! (Score:1)
Alliteration (Score:4, Funny)
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Molten Hot Magma gets the Award of Triple Redundancy Award.
I have an idea (Score:1)
growing planets (Score:1)
http://www.continuitystudios.net/clip00.html [continuitystudios.net]
http://www.nealadams.com/nmu.html [nealadams.com]
http://www.wincom.net/earthexp/n/navback.htm [wincom.net]
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Bringing Neal Adams into this makes me wonder a lot of things about what I wasn't told about.
Amazingly noone noticed... (Score:1)
Corrected Wikipedia link (Score:3, Informative)
And in other news... (Score:1)
as evil geniuses the world over vie for the best plots on what seems
likely to become the solar systems new secret evil lair 'hot spot'.
Do we have to have a stake in this? If so.. (Score:1)
Is it a press release or a paper? (Score:2)
How can they detect that with radio waves? (Score:1)
But.. (Score:2, Funny)
so you could describe the core as... (Score:2)
Hot (Score:1)
I wonder, would it be less hot, if Mercury had dual core???
23 skidoo (Score:2)
Sure I remember young whipper snappers! And then the talkies came and Vaudeville was dead..
I'm pretty sure I'm an "old man" here and I was less than a year old then so I can't say I remember.
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You and me both; I was born in September 1974, and reading some of the comments here I definitely feel old. So many people talking about college; I graduated from university 10 years ago this year...
I remember (Score:1)
The memories are a lot alike for me. I was like a little spacecraft, looking for my target in the darkness of the space under the blankets. My goal was huge. Literally, she was the size of Mercury. And she was hot too. Sweaty hot. Uncomfortable and slippery sweaty hot. I snuck a little camera in there and took some blurry low resolution pictures
Big Dissapointment (Score:2)
So I was sitting in my armchair the other day... (Score:2)
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