Lower Thermal Radiation Input Needed To Trigger Planetary 'Runaway Greenhouse' 137
vinces99 writes with this excerpt from the UW news service: "It might be easier than previously thought for a planet to overheat into the scorchingly uninhabitable 'runaway greenhouse' stage, according to new research (abstract, article paywalled) by astronomers at the University of Washington and the University of Victoria. In the runaway greenhouse stage, a planet absorbs more solar energy than it can give off to retain equilibrium. As a result, the world overheats, boiling its oceans and filling its atmosphere with steam, which leaves the planet glowing-hot and forever uninhabitable, as Venus is now. One estimate of the inner edge of a star's 'habitable zone' is where the runaway greenhouse process begins. The habitable zone is that ring of space around a star that's just right for water to remain in liquid form on an orbiting rocky planet's surface, thus giving life a chance. Revisiting this classic planetary science scenario with new computer modeling, the astronomers found a lower thermal radiation threshold for the runaway greenhouse process, meaning that stage may be easier to initiate."
If correct, the habitable zone shrinks a bit and a few exoplanets might lose their potentially habitable status. And the Earth will leave the habitable zone in a billion and a half or so years as the Sun gets brighter.
Mars and Venus are warnings (Score:1)
They are our sister planets, each expressing an ultimate degree to which things can go, and with what we've been discovering recently, remarkably little 'input'.
Re:Mars and Venus are warnings (Score:4, Insightful)
I think mars was doomed from the beginning but I wonder if Venus could be terraformed with some kind of aerosol cloud to shade it and reduce the thermal input.
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I think at sunshade at Sun-Venus Lagrange Point 1 would do the trick.
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I assume that the shade cannot simply absorb or reflect the light, as the light pressure would push it towards Venus, so some kind of backwards spreading would be needed. Could changing the angular distribution of this be enough to correct for the pertubations, or is a solar sail far to weak for this to work? What if the pertubations were predictable?
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You can't remain "stationary" at an L1, 2, or 3 point without station keeping, but you can orbit those points with minimal fuel consumption for orbital maintenance. The orbit is just considerably more complicated than the elliptical orbits we're familiar with.
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You do understand, don't you, that except for the L4 and L5 points all of the Lagrange points are very unstable?
You do understand don't you that once we are talking about moving sun shades to Lagrange points around other planets and terraforming, that we are speaking of energy budgets that would dwarf maintenance on keeping any such item in that Lagrange point for a substantial period of time. Sort of like taking the great American cross country family road trip to Disney World and then complaining that the cost of parking might be too much.
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A sufficiently large artificial satellite put at the "Venus - Sun" legrange point would put venus into a state of purpetual eclipse, would/could mechanically shade the planet from solar high velocity particles, and serve as a useful space based power station for the planet. (I am thinking something like a great big sheet of metal impregnated mylar, with a weighted rim, spread open and stabilized using centrepital force. Its orbital relationship with venus stabilized using reaction wheels. For space based po
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You'd also have to get rid of all the excess atmosphere somehow so a human on the surface wouldn't be crushed like a grape.
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Who says you have to live on the surface?
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Gravity
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When the atmosphere is so dense that a pleasant nitrogen oxygen mix at is a lifting gas gravity isn't as much of a problem as you might expect. And since you're airborne you neatly get around the problems associated with Venus's very long day, and you can map/explore most of the planet just by letting the winds take you where they will. Not to mention that there are elevations with approximately 1 atmosphere of pressure and comfortable temperatures too, and if your dirigible springs a leak you have equal
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When the atmosphere is so dense a nitrogen oxygen mix is VERY pleasant [wikipedia.org] but not for long.
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Floating cities in the upper atmosphere could indeed be a possibility, if for some reason you wanted to actually live suspended in the midst of continuous violent storms above a hellish inferno waiting to crush and corrode anything that sinks too deep, rather than in a nice safe space station or something. But N2/O2 makes for a pretty lousy lift gas, even on Venus. The atmosphere is almost entirely CO2, which has a molar mas of 44 versus 28 for N2 or 32 for O2, call it 30 average for simplicity's sake, so
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There are advantages to being in the atmosphere though that you can't get in space. First and foremost is... the atmosphere. CO2 can be cracked for oxygen, the various acids can be broken down for water and fuel. Yes, using breathable air as a lifting gas makes your dirigible bigger, but you have to bring the air along anyway and store it someplace. If you compress it down and store it in tanks you'd then need more H2 to support that weight, may as well just use it for lift.
Also, I think you underestima
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Certainly there's potentially useful materials in the atmosphere, the question is only whether it's worthwhile to risk human lives rather than having an automated refinery send supplies up to a orbiting station - something like an airship-to-orbit or skyhook system could potentially be quite effective for such a purpose.
Have you ever seen an aircraft getting tossed around in a thunderstorm? Now imagine trying to build a floating city that was constantly being subjected to even more violent stresses. From w
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You'd also have to get rid of all the excess atmosphere somehow so a human on the surface wouldn't be crushed like a grape.
Why? As temperature drops, you liquify and solidify lots of the atmosphere.
Anyway, the project, if put into effect today, would take thousands of years to accomplish. With our 4-year-election-plans, we can't even handle global warming on our planet, never mind terraforming another!
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Depending on how long you are willing to wait, and how aggressively you are eclipsing the planet, the sunshade will eventially do both:
At some point, the mean surface temperature will drop to the freezing temperature of carbon dioxide, and the atmosphere will crystallize, then snow out onto the surface, reducing surface pressure.
Again, if you have a million years or more you can spend servicing the reflector, and twiddling your thumbs. ;)
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The problem is that the venusian atmosphere is mostly CO2, with some anhydrous sulfuric acid thrown in.
At greater than 200psi, and warmer than 70F (metric users can suck it. I live in the US. I don't see you guys helpfully giving imperial units on your posts! Meh! [/silly faux bitching] instead, enjoy this helpful link. [wikipedia.org]) CO2 becomes a supercritical gas. With no meniscus, the atmosphere will still ascend very high above the surface, and be too hot to condense. Items on the surface will still be "crushed like
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Imperial unit have no business in science, and I live in the US.
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Can you not recognize a joke when you see one?
I knew "off my head" what the imperial transition zone was, since I work in aerospace, and it is useful as an industrial solvent and coolant. Much like many european posters are too lazy to be arsed to look up imperial numbers for things off the tops of their heads, I was too lazy to do the same in the inverse direction. I did however, link to an informative article on wikipedia that gives the metric values for the transition point, assuming you aren't one of t
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LOL! No. No crashy space probes on my conscience.
Instead, I usually have to deal with Airbus (when dealing with metric engineering), who's engineering is so lackluster that their planes fall out of the sky [airfrance447.com] all on their own anyway. [perth-wrx.com] (admittedly, the BOEING 787 dreamliner is turning out to be a total spruce goose, given the number of times it has been grounded for faults in the electrical system. Thankfully we don't make parts for that system.)
BOEING/Spirit Aerosystems' engineering is all in imperial distance
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Glad you got a kick out of it. I couldn't pass up the chance to ask ;-)
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Who what?
I said it was CO2 with anhydrous sulfuric acid mixed in! How do you get "steam" from that!?
(Boggled mind!)
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Deep sea divers don't get crushed like a grape. They do get nitrogen in their bloodstream if they breathe regular air and the bends if they decompress too quickly.
So we "only" have to create a helium/oxygen atmosphere and good decompression facilities in the spaceports and life on Venus can be a reality. Everyone there will talk like ducks, but that's a small price to pay for interplanetary colonization!
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Wait a second!!
Venutian ducks can talk??
Actually, I didn't even know Venus had ducks.
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The surface pressure on Venus is about 900 atmospheres. Divers would have to be at the bottom of the Mariana Trench (about 6.8 miles) to experience the same pressure which is far below what a diver can dive without a protective submersible. So, yes, they would get crushed like a grape.
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I believe that's off by an order of magnitude: the surface pressure on Venus is about 92 bar = 92 atmospheres, equivalent to a depth of about 3000 feet, slightly less than 1000 meters. Most of the Earth's ocean is much deeper than that. I think the deepest real dive (in the ocean or a lake) is around 1600 feet (500 meters). The reason for not going deeper has nothing to do with being crushed, since the gas you're breathing is at the same pressure as the water around you. Rather it is that the gases you'
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Re:Mars and Venus are warnings (Score:5, Interesting)
That's why you put it "sunward" of the lagrangian point, so that it wants to fall into the sun, but is pushed out of the well by the solar wind. ;)
(Exactly where that would be depends on the specific impulse of the solar sail effect, and the mass of the reflector. Since both are hypothetical, I can't really give specifics.)
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It would be. That is indisputable.
The sun in a yellow dwarf variable star. Its solar output varies, and can be quite erratic. Its gravitational attraction would vary significantly less.
The issue is which set of problems you want to inherit from such an installation:
1) a constant stream of supply missions to keep the unstable L1 situated reflector on station using reaction mass propellant, spare parts for thruster ports and hose assemblies, and all the related logistics.
2) maintaing a tightrope teetering on
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Is there some way you could use the energy to break the CO2 and sequester the carbon?
I'd think a bacteria would be more efficient but if that wouldn't work, you could have a "balloon" with solar cells that broke the CO2 and released O2 and periodically dropped solid carbon masses to the planet.
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There is.
There is a manmade plastic called "aramid", which is comprised of nitrogen, carbon, and hydrogen. It has no melting temperature, and has a thermal decomposition temperature of approxmately 500c. (Just a little under the mean surface temperature for venus.) It dissolves, but does not denaturate in strong acids.
Should an atmospheric sulfur cycle bacterium be engineered to make use of this substance for cell walls, their little dead bodies resulting from their "natural" lifecycle would fall into the l
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Venus already has a really effective 'shade' - the bond albedo (percentage of light from the sun it reflects) is 0.9 (90%). Compared to ~0.3 for Earth
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/venusfact.html [nasa.gov]
Venus is so hot at the surface mostly because the atmosphere is incredibly dense at the surface (93 times earth). In geneneral, as pressure increases in a planets troposphere, so does temperature. If you go deep enough into the gas giants (even Neptune), you will find very hot temperatures, at hi
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Another fun fact:
Total quantity of nitrogen gas in the venusian atmosphere is comparable to total quantity of nitrogen gas in the earth's atmosphere. The Venusian atmosphere is simply MUCH denser, and the nitrogen is diluted VERY heavily with CO2.
(Meaning, if you used a compressor and condenser on a "balloon city", you could extract the nitrogen lifting gas by compressing and freezing the CO2, and then dropping it over the side as dry ice. This assumes that the balloon city is floating at 1bar pressure elev
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I think mars was doomed from the beginning but I wonder if Venus could be terraformed with some kind of aerosol cloud to shade it and reduce the thermal input.
I think that an answer to that requires some background. Venus has already lost most of its water to space due to a combination of things. Atmospheric sputtering due to the small magnetic field because of slow rotation rate (thought to be caused by an early collision with a proto planet early on) continues to carry along with the solar wind away lighter molecules like water and helium. Venus being closer to the sun doesn't help it either.
This documentary [youtube.com] shows how the earth was formed and also gives the cu
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Thanks didn't realize about the magnetic field.
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You can't be serious.
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No, they may not be valid "warnings" but that does not affect global warming. Changing the composition of the atmosphere with gasses which have different infra-read absorbance will have an affect on surface temperature, or do you think basic physics does not apply hear? Science is specialised I would trust a quantum physicist, for example, almost as much as my grandfather(who has no such knowledge) to be able to come up with valid understanding of the climate. If you as a physicist wish to look for like-
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Based on what evidence do you say that they could be in the very narrow habitable range of all the necessary parameters? And what makes you think that they are a warning of any sort? AGW hysteria is premised on lack of understanding of the heat equation. It's biggest skeptics are physicists. It's biggest proponents are Hollywood actors and politicians. If you disagree, do tell why the heat equation doesn't apply all of a sudden. If you can't, then stop spewing bull shit.
AGW skepticism is akin to Intelligent Design. It's a false 'controversy' manufactured for political reasons.
Your dismissal of the broad consensus of relevant experts is reminiscent of mount stupid. [borgerlyst.dk]
It's all a big conspiracy, right?
Re:Who the fuck cares ? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's easy to think about observer as about god - it's something that everybody have or it lives inside everybody who's alive, it does not include any part of personality, it does not have any properties at all - so everybody have the same observer, or, you can say, it's one for everybody. If you think about it this way - it does not die after your death, so it makes you almost immortal - if you define 'me' such it does not include your personality, which I believe is right - as personality is just a sum of your genes and previous life experience.
So, what can be our purpose in life, and what can be the purpose of a humane race? Based on above I believe it should be protecting and expanding areal of carbon based life form. This runaway greenhouse scenario will end up with earth without liquid water on a surface - it can possible kill all life as we know it, so we should try to prevent it, even if it will happen after our personal deaths. Anyway, on a long enough time line, chances of survival of life on planet Earth drops to zero - so I believe we should do what we can to extend life, not necessary humans - maybe just a seeds from which evolution can begin - to as many planets as we can.
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Plus... it's nice to eradicate the human race anyway - there are just too many such vermins on this planet anyway
You go first. The rest of us could do with fewer of you self-loathing, emo douchebags.
Me? I don't give 2 shits about "the planet" aside from its use as a suitable habitat for human life. I also don't' give a crap about other life, except for its function in maintaining a suitable ecosystem for humans to thrive in.
In short, if you eradicate humans, would the planet be better off? The correct answer to this question is "Who gives a fuck?"
Needs more doomsday. (Score:4, Funny)
I don't know about the rest of you, but I found the last two lines of the summary to be quite anticlimactic. Where's the fear-mongering?
Re:Needs more doomsday. (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know about the rest of you, but I found the last two lines of the summary to be quite anticlimactic. Where's the fear-mongering?
Well, it seemed pretty terrifying to me. I'm not sure what kind of plans you've been making, but this significantly moves up my time tables. Now we'll probably have to completely abandon Earth instead of preserving any as a museum for the origin of life. Well, at least we can take the gene sequences...
Now it'll be much more of a smash and grab to get as many resources and mechanizations manufactured from the asteroid belt before we bolt for a new star-system. All but the first few percent of the plan will have to be re-calculated! Finding a younger destination star means taking a bigger risk with its instability, or planning an additional interstellar hop to last out the rest of the 4 billion years till the Andromeda Galaxy merges with this one. I mean, of course revisions are planed and there's some uncertainty to iron out as the future nears, but now Everything is Gorked! It might just turn out to be a complete cut and run to drift the nearest nebula and suck up the frigging dust dregs!
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It would be terrifying if you were actually an "Immortal" who can't die and yet does not have enough power to create universes or do other things to actually enjoy Eternity.
Being stuck on a planet for billions of years till its sun blows up is not going to be pleasant especially if you can't die and you can't escape. After that you'd probably be stuck in space for a long time - which might be even worse.
Might be fine if you have really good Immortal friends to be stuck in the same "boat" with... Not sure ho
No problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
so long as we aren't responsible for it?
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so long as we aren't responsible for it?
So long as it won't happen in the next million years....
Earth also has the potential (Score:2)
At least according to the abstract of the research paper (couldn't read the paper itself) if Earth is brought into the hot moist athmosphere state, that state would maintain itself. From the abstract (emphasis mine):
Therefore, a steam atmosphere induced by such a runaway greenhouse may be a stable state for a planet receiving a similar amount of solar radiation as Earth today. Avoiding a runaway greenhouse on Earth requires that the atmosphere is subsaturated with water, and that the albedo effect of clouds exceeds their greenhouse effect. A runaway greenhouse could in theory be triggered by increased greenhouse forcing, but anthropogenic emissions are probably insufficient.
So we will probably not manage to terraform Earth into Venus just by continuing CO2 emissions. But maybe if the Vogons [wikia.com] help a bit ....
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Re:Earth also has the potential (Score:4, Interesting)
The two are not linked. If we move off fossil fuels, our net CO2 emissions are cut to virtually zero, regardless of population (in fact, increased population acts as a carbon sink) or energy usage. Given enough cheap, carbon-free energy to distill seawater and power hydroponic stacks, we can support a far larger population if required.
Then all we have to worry about is excess waste heat [utexas.edu], which will be a huge problem in 300-400 years. Though limiting ourselves to solar-derived energy can help a lot here.
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if earth's population was reduced by half (gradually), the amount of CO2 emissions would also be cut by half.
Only if you reduce it evenly throughout all countries.
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CO2 alarmists pointing to Venus as a warning seem to forget that it is much closer to that big furnace, and that its composition, among other parameters, is widely different.
Fearing that earth could shortly turn into Venus is as silly as fearing that it would become a second Jupiter.
It doesn't have to be that scenario to be a big problem. just the melting of all the ice on earth alone would be a 70 meter problem.
Forever is a long time (Score:3)
Well, until someone comes along and terraforms it back using a sunshade.
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For earth? (Rough geometrical computation)
Where: Earth-sun lagrange point 1.
How big: at least 12628.4km in diameter. (Earth is 12756km in diameter.) Roughly the same size as the earth. This would completely shade the earth.
(Given: Earth-Sun distance == 149600000km, earth-L1 distance == 1475000km (roughly), earth diameter == 12756km)
Keeping it homeostatic against solar wind is tricky, but I would do it by putting the reflector slightly sunward of the L1 point, so that solar impulse is balanced by solar gravi
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Better to put the reflector "sunward" of L1, so that it wants to fall into the sun, but is pushed out by the solar wind, and held static.
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One possible solution to the "space weather is erratic!" Problem, is to have the reflector positioned so that it is at "nominal" condition, but not fully deployed, and able to retract while in service.
This way if solar impulse is too low, it can deploy a little further without changing mass, and get more active surface.
Likewise, if there is a large influx of solar wind (cme or something), it can constrict itself by pulling in some of the built in tow lines embedded in the fabric to reduce its surface to mat
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The "mirror" is an array of mylar (or similar) mirrors with circuits printed on them, built with a massively redundant mesh-shaped network, ala the transputer or any other similar processor with multiple links only very much dumber. On the front (sun-facing) side you print a solar array and on the rear, an array of ion engines. Like the processing power, both types of element are evenly distributed across the array. The array can also contract portions of itself using some type of actuator so that it can re
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That's basically what I had in mind, except that it wouldn't need ion thrusters if it was sunward of L1, since solar gravity would naturally attract it away from station, and light pressure would push it back on station, only requiring that it adjust its effective aperature to regulate its orbital position. Ion thrusters require fuel. Making use of light pressure and gravity is free*.
It would need solar power to drive its orientational reaction wheels.
It *should* have emergency station keeping thrusters, bu
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It doesn't need any reaction wheels. You are adding parts where they do not exist. If it can contract and it can push parts of itself around with ion engines then it can reorient without wheels because it weighs jack diddly shit and it will have all the surface area it can use for collecting power to drive a truly massive number of them. Indeed, adding wheels would only add moving parts which are completely unnecessary.
A billion years or so (Score:1)
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only 22 pounds to read the actual research! (Score:2, Insightful)
This article is so affordable. Only 22 pounds. We are so privileged to have the opportunity to read this study. Just imagine a world where such study results were just given away for free. Communism!
It really is a much better world where only paying customers have access to scientific research. It is destructive and dangerous to allow poor people access to knowledge. In that way lies anarchy! The horror. Next we'll be arguing not only that information wants to be free, but that it should be free. Cats and d
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Two of the researchers who wrote this work at NASA. Seems questionable at best to charge for research that was conducted with public funds.
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You can probably walk into any major university, find the library and do a scholar.google.com search for a very large percentage of all peer reviewed published research. Then print it off (or save to USB key), and leave, without paying anything.
You can, and that's exactly the sort of behaviour that gets you a federal prosecution [wikipedia.org].
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what about weather dynamics? (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, I gather the relative heating depends on the spectrum of the star to some degree. I gather there's some degree of transparency of water to the lower frequency UV so a bluer star with the same energy influx might have a bit more energy penetrate the atmosphere than a redder star.
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The question is "Is this model useful?"
Not for the claim they were making:
Here we model the solar and thermal radiative transfer in incipient and complete runaway greenhouse atmospheres at line-by-line spectral resolution using a modern spectral database. We find a thermal radiation limit of 282âWâmâ'2 (lower than previously reported) and that 294âWâmâ'2 of solar radiation is absorbed (higher than previously reported). Therefore, a steam atmosphere induced by such a runaway greenhouse may be a stable state for a planet receiving a similar amount of solar radiation as Earth today.
The problem is that key cooling components of the atmosphere hide in higher dimensional, dynamic models of atmosphere.
whoa wait, it's not climate change??? (Score:1, Insightful)
"And the Earth will leave the habitable zone in a billion and a half or so years as the Sun gets brighter"
There, you said it, has nothing whatsoever to do with "climate change" here on earth, it's all the S-U-N!!! ;)
Re:whoa wait, it's not climate change??? (Score:4, Funny)
Earth says: "I didn't leave the habitable zone. The habitable zone left me!"
Patwalled (Score:2)
I wish I could read the actual studies. Most are paywalled. Can we change this? I want to learn!
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Pick your poison (Score:1)
While this may be true, I'll take warding off the next ice age in 10,000 years if global warming is the cost. Between the two, higher sea levels is a no-brainer.
Ruh roh raggy (Score:2)
I think it's a , it's a , gh-gh-gh-greenhouse gas global warming monster!
Quick you assclowns! Get into the mystery hybrid mobile! *Vrrrrooooomm*
I think it's still chasing us! How could that be? We left the Hubbert peak way behind with our super efficiency!
Uh-oh, if my calculations are correct, the only people our efficiency was helping was the *gulp* big oil companies themselves.
*poof* The monster appeared in the mystery hybrid mobile! The monster tore its own mask off!
"Will you kids shut the **** up? I'm n
What? How long????? (Score:1)
Oh, ok, I thought it said a Million and half years. I was worried.
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Actually, steam should glow spectacularly in the far IR spectrum.
Clearly, you are unfamiliar with blackbody radiation, and with what the primary absorption/emission bands are for water vapor.
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To be fair, they said a billion and a half years, not 50 billion years. Although the chance of us being around in a billion years is non-existant. Certainly not in our current form. We'll have either evolved by then (look how far we've come in the last 100,000 years alone) or run ourselves into extinction.
I'd say we have quite a bit longer than 'a few thousand years', though. We've been around as mature homo sapiens for more than a few thousand years already. Oh sure, we may manage to wipe out "most" of us