Where did Earth's water come from? | |
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VegasRick
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Apocalypse Troll
Trollicus Apocalyptus 09/23/2020 04:39 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Comets. "Honor the Texas flag; I pledge allegiance to thee, Texas, one state under God, one and indivisible." [link to www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us] |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 72610863 United States 09/23/2020 04:40 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What happened is that before our solar system formed there was all this other star stuff left behind from exploded dead stars. By all their heating and expanding and such they created these super bonds chemically within certain compounds that allowed themselves to bond with other compounds out in the colder sphere which created carbon first, and later water. |
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Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 72584467 United Kingdom 09/23/2020 04:44 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What happened is that before our solar system formed there was all this other star stuff left behind from exploded dead stars. By all their heating and expanding and such they created these super bonds chemically within certain compounds that allowed themselves to bond with other compounds out in the colder sphere which created carbon first, and later water. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 72610863 But how did it get here though? If what you are saying is true then all of space must have been full of water, no? What made this sphere attract the water? |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 72610863 United States 09/23/2020 04:56 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What happened is that before our solar system formed there was all this other star stuff left behind from exploded dead stars. By all their heating and expanding and such they created these super bonds chemically within certain compounds that allowed themselves to bond with other compounds out in the colder sphere which created carbon first, and later water. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 72610863 But how did it get here though? If what you are saying is true then all of space must have been full of water, no? What made this sphere attract the water? It was here in space already. Space was full of carbon from previous star life/births. Combine that with our own sun's birth. The molecular behavior of carbon lends itself to bonding with oxygen. Other important molecules were bonded and bouncing around. Our planet generated oxygen. Suns bonded these molecules which labs cannot duplicate without super crazy stuff like reactors. They still can't turn a simple metal into gold. Only one bond away... |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 72610863 United States 09/23/2020 04:58 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What happened is that before our solar system formed there was all this other star stuff left behind from exploded dead stars. By all their heating and expanding and such they created these super bonds chemically within certain compounds that allowed themselves to bond with other compounds out in the colder sphere which created carbon first, and later water. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 72610863 But how did it get here though? If what you are saying is true then all of space must have been full of water, no? What made this sphere attract the water? What is water? H20. I kept saying carbon, but I forgot to mention hydrogen. Hydrogen is the most ubiquitous molecule created by suns from what I recall. |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 72610863 United States 09/23/2020 05:02 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What happened is that before our solar system formed there was all this other star stuff left behind from exploded dead stars. By all their heating and expanding and such they created these super bonds chemically within certain compounds that allowed themselves to bond with other compounds out in the colder sphere which created carbon first, and later water. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 72610863 You'd probably enjoy studying chemistry from an astrological standpoint. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 11019378 United Kingdom 09/23/2020 05:56 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | What happened is that before our solar system formed there was all this other star stuff left behind from exploded dead stars. By all their heating and expanding and such they created these super bonds chemically within certain compounds that allowed themselves to bond with other compounds out in the colder sphere which created carbon first, and later water. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 72610863 You'd probably enjoy studying chemistry from an astrological standpoint. Isn't that a part of what alchemy is? |
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Reader.
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 79203147 United States 09/23/2020 01:03 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I did and they don't know. The answers are not satisfactory. Google doesn't know everything ya know! Stop looking to modern day Pharisee (scientists) for answers. They have none, it's all just kubaki theater. The answers are with God and Jesus Christ our lord and savior. Get right with God and you'll have all the answers you need. |
HM238
User ID: 56828851 United States 09/23/2020 01:06 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The process to create water requires pretty specific conditions and energy... and it produces very little H2O. No one has the answer. There are theories about asteroids or during the formation of the planets but none of them fully explain it or can account for the sheer volume of water on Earth. HM238 |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 78842581 United States 09/23/2020 01:08 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The process to create water requires pretty specific conditions and energy... and it produces very little H2O. No one has the answer. There are theories about asteroids or during the formation of the planets but none of them fully explain it or can account for the sheer volume of water on Earth. Quoting: HM238 If you have Hydrogen (all around in the universe) and OXYGEN (produced by nucleosynthesis in great quantities in stars during their lifetimes), it is pretty easy to have WATER. All it takes then is one little SPARK. From FIRE sometimes comes WATER. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 78842581 United States 09/23/2020 01:09 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
HM238
User ID: 56828851 United States 09/23/2020 01:25 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | If you have Hydrogen (all around in the universe) and OXYGEN (produced by nucleosynthesis in great quantities in stars during their lifetimes), it is pretty easy to have WATER. Quoting: Tekton All it takes then is one little SPARK. From FIRE sometimes comes WATER. Except it doesn't. That would create such miniscule amounts of water that it doesn't come close to accounting for the water found on Earth. If it were that simple it would be settled science and it isn't. There is no consensus or even theory that accounts for all water on Earth unless you make a big leap that it all came from asteroids which would require an unfathomable amount of asteroids over an even vaster span of time. HM238 |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 79203147 United States 09/23/2020 01:28 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The process to create water requires pretty specific conditions and energy... and it produces very little H2O. No one has the answer. There are theories about asteroids or during the formation of the planets but none of them fully explain it or can account for the sheer volume of water on Earth. Quoting: HM238 If you have Hydrogen (all around in the universe) and OXYGEN (produced by nucleosynthesis in great quantities in stars during their lifetimes), it is pretty easy to have WATER. All it takes then is one little SPARK. From FIRE sometimes comes WATER. You people are psychos. This freemason mindfuck nonsense needs to end. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 78842581 United States 09/23/2020 01:29 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The process to create water requires pretty specific conditions and energy... and it produces very little H2O. No one has the answer. There are theories about asteroids or during the formation of the planets but none of them fully explain it or can account for the sheer volume of water on Earth. Quoting: HM238 If you have Hydrogen (all around in the universe) and OXYGEN (produced by nucleosynthesis in great quantities in stars during their lifetimes), it is pretty easy to have WATER. All it takes then is one little SPARK. From FIRE sometimes comes WATER. You people are psychos. This freemason mindfuck nonsense needs to end. I am not a Mason. This has nothing to do with that. In fact, I am on the other side: conservative pre-Vatican II Catholic. You have the wrong guy. This is much older wisdom than Freemasonry. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 78842581 United States 09/23/2020 01:31 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | If you have Hydrogen (all around in the universe) and OXYGEN (produced by nucleosynthesis in great quantities in stars during their lifetimes), it is pretty easy to have WATER. Quoting: Tekton All it takes then is one little SPARK. From FIRE sometimes comes WATER. Except it doesn't. That would create such miniscule amounts of water that it doesn't come close to accounting for the water found on Earth. If it were that simple it would be settled science and it isn't. There is no consensus or even theory that accounts for all water on Earth unless you make a big leap that it all came from asteroids which would require an unfathomable amount of asteroids over an even vaster span of time. Our whole planet may have been formed over time by such planetesimals and some brought the water and atmosphere. |
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