Maybe a silly question but; how can a water world have a temperature hotter than Venus, for example?
It may not be pure water, physics allows a lot of weird stuffMaybe a silly question but; how can a water world have a temperature hotter than Venus, for example?
Prof Björn Benneke, of the University of Montreal, has carried out additional observations of the planet and questions the “hycean world” hypothesis. “The temperature in our view is too warm for water to be liquid,” he said, adding that the atmosphere appeared to contain substantial amounts of water vapour – too much for the existence of an ocean to be plausible. At the surface, temperatures could reach 4000C, Benneke estimates, with water existing in a supercritical state, where the distinction between a liquid and gas becomes blurred. “It’s almost like a thick, hot fluid,” he said.
Might also depend on the atmosphere, if there's a high atmospheric pressure, for example, water behaves differently than it does under Earth's one atmosphere pressure.Maybe a silly question but; how can a water world have a temperature hotter than Venus, for example?
It can't, period.Maybe a silly question but; how can a water world have a temperature hotter than Venus, for example?
It can, period.It can't, period.
But yes, a very very good question![]()
As aRJay said - atmospheric pressure is an important factor - water in the same pot on the same gas burner is going to boil at a higher temperature at sea level than, for example, in the mountains at 2000 meters above sea level. Add to that changes that different compositions can make, as mentioned by Darrack - pure water and a soup made with the same water will boil differently - results of such combinations could be quite extreme.Maybe a silly question but; how can a water world have a temperature hotter than Venus, for example?
Higher pressure.Maybe a silly question but; how can a water world have a temperature hotter than Venus, for example?
You don't boil bacon, and keep an eye on it.reciept time kfc chicken salted water,so why did burn my bacon and that was salted lol.i dont think there is a straight answers to the oringinal post ,i cant think of one anyway,but fair question asked.
The amount of salt you add for cooking doesn't even add half a degree. To get to 104 degrees you need to add more salt than you find in seawater! But the salt does make the water come to the boil faster and it's easier to keeping it boiling because it changed the "specific heat" which is how much the temperature rises per amount of heat (energy) you pump into it.Salted water has 104C degrees to boil on Earth at the sea level. That's why we cook all salted![]()
I did not know that! Nom nom.And pressure as others said. KFC cooks at high pressure, that's why it is so soft, because it is boiled over 100C.
For the same reason someone at work lost their bacon sandwich when they tried to heat it in the 1000°C lab furnace.reciept time kfc chicken salted water,so why did burn my bacon and that was salted lol.i dont think there is a straight answers to the oringinal post ,i cant think of one anyway,but fair question asked.
I've seen water worlds in the game with atmospheric pressures much higher than Earth.All the answers seem valid although I'm having difficult imagining Earth -sized worlds (and very many of these water worlds seem to be) having such excessive atmospheric pressures.