Soulmate Gem
Photo: Markus Spiske
As the innermost planet in the Solar System, Mercury receives the most radiation from the Sun: almost four times as much as Venus receives.
Here are 10 signs he loves you deeply. He makes time for you. Everyone is busy and they can cancel plans all the time. ... He makes you feel safe....
Read More »
A woman's peak reproductive years are between the late teens and late 20s. By age 30, fertility (the ability to get pregnant) starts to decline....
Read More »In the grand scheme of the Solar System, the greatest source of energy by far is the Sun. While radioactivity and gravitational contraction might supply a substantial amount of energy to the cores of massive planets, the light and heat emitted from our parent star is overwhelmingly responsible for a planet’s surface temperature. To an excellent approximation, the Sun keeps not only Earth, but all the planets at a temperature well above what they’d be without it: just a few Kelvin. (Without an external heat source, most planetary temperatures would equilibrate at -270 °C / -455 °F.) During the day, the planets absorb energy from the Sun, but during both the day and the night, they radiate energy back into space. This is why temperatures heat up during the day and cool off during the night, something that’s pretty much true for every planet that has both a day side and a night side. We also expect seasons — cool times and warm times — based on both how elliptical a planet’s orbit is and on its axial tilt. An accurate model of how the planets orbit the Sun, which then moves through the galaxy in a different direction-of-motion. The distance of each planet from the Sun determines the amount of overall radiation and energy that it receives, but this is not the only factor in play in determining a planet’s temperature. ( Credit : Rhys Taylor) But if a planet’s various orbital parameters were the only things that determined temperature, then the closest planet to the Sun would inevitably be the hottest, and they would all get progressively cooler as we moved farther and farther away. Perhaps a gas giant that was large enough to generate a significant fraction of its own heat would change that order (if Jupiter and Neptune were swapped, this might be the case), but in general we’d expect a planet’s temperature to drop in proportion to its distance from the Sun. We can check this expectation by starting at the innermost planet and working our way outwards. The above image shows an orthographic projection of this global mosaic centered at 0°N, 0°E. The rayed crater Debussy can be seen towards the bottom of the globe and the peak-ring basin Rachmaninoff can be seen towards the eastern edge. Mercury is the Solar System’s innermost planet, and was mapped in detail by NASA’s MESSENGER mission. ( Credit : NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington) Mercury is hot. If we’re being quantitative, it’s actually extremely hot! As the closest planet to the Sun, it completes an orbit in just 88 Earth-days, achieving a maximum temperature during the day of a whopping 700 Kelvin (427 °C / 800 °F) at its hottest, equatorial locations. Mercury rotates very slowly, so its night side spends a consecutively long time in the dark, shielded from the Sun; during those times, it gets down to just 100 Kelvin (−173 °C / −280 °F). That low temperature is incredibly cold, and far colder than any known naturally occurring temperatures here on Earth. That’s the story of the closest planet to the Sun: Mercury.
Kissing is as much a skill as an art, and there could be a number of reasons why someone might choose to gaze at whom they're kissing. And, there's...
Read More »
In Aristotle's treatise On Youth, Old Age, Life and Death, and Respiration, Aristotle explicitly states that while the soul has a corporeal form,...
Read More »
It's a rebel with a cause, and sometimes without one. In traditional astrology Aquarius was governed or ruled by the planet Saturn, though many...
Read More »
Though covering the legs during a funeral is a unique burial ritual, in reality, it stems from your preferences in holding the ceremony for the...
Read More »This is because of the fourth and all-important difference between the two worlds: Mercury has no atmosphere, while Venus has a very substantial one that’s some ~90 times as thick as Earth’s is. Transits of Venus (top) and Mercury (bottom) across the edge of the Sun. Note how Venus’ atmosphere diffracts sunlight around it, while Mercury’s lack of atmosphere shows no such effects. ( Credit : JAXA/NASA/Hinode (top); NASA/TRACE (bottom)) You see, Mercury and Venus don’t just absorb light from the Sun; each planet then re-radiates that energy as heat back into space. For airless Mercury, all of that heat goes immediately back into space. But on Venus, the story is different. Each quantum of infrared radiation — the re-radiated heat — has got to get through that thick, thick atmosphere, which is difficult. Multiple layers of clouds on Venus are responsible for different signatures in different wavelength bands, but all show a consistent picture of a “hothouse” planet dominated by a runaway greenhouse effect. ( Credit : Venus Express/Planetary Science Group) Not only does Venus possess an atmosphere many times the thickness of Earth’s, loaded with huge amounts of infrared-absorbing gases like carbon dioxide, but it’s shrouded in terrifically thick layers of highly reflective clouds. This sulfuric acid haze, which extends for more than 20 km in thickness, encircles the planet at speeds from 210 to 370 km/hr, trapping the vast majority of the radiated heat and transferring it all across the planet. The long nights provide no escape from the heat, as the trapping and thermalizing effects of the cloud layers keep the surface of Venus at an inhospitably high temperature, so much so that if you added up the operational time of every lander that ever touched down on Venus’ surface, it wouldn’t even sum to half an Earth-day. The very cold, polar regions of the Earth have a mean temperature far below the rest of the planet: approximately -20 Celsius. Were it not for Earth’s atmosphere, these regions would instead be representative of the average temperature on Earth, with enormous day/night fluctuations. ( Credit : ESA/IPEV/PNRA–B. Healey) But in the right amounts, atmospheric heat-trapping can be the best thing ever to happen to a world. If it weren’t for Earth’s atmosphere, the mean temperature on our planet would be a paltry 255 Kelvin (-18 °C / -1 °F), or approximately the temperature of the Antarctic continent. The blanket-like effect of the clouds and atmospheric gases lift our planet’s climate into the temperate zone where life-as-we-know it has thrived for so long. Yet early in the Solar System’s history, with a cooler Sun and a much thinner atmosphere, Venus was probably similar in temperature to Earth’s today. It likely had the same potential for life and biological processes, but a runaway catastrophe created the permanent inferno that’s inhabited our sister world for billions of years. This timelapse view of the aurorae on Earth, as night, as the International Space Station flies over the Earth, shows our sister planet, Venus, rising over the horizon. This animation was composed by ESA astronaut Tim Peake. ( Credit : NASA/ESA) While Earth isn’t at risk of the same fate, Venus stands as both the hottest world in our Solar System and a cautionary tale of an out-of-control greenhouse effect. As we come to better understand the processes that drive the Earth’s climate and temperature, it’s our responsibility to steer our planet in the right direction. The link between the Sun, the atmosphere and the planet’s fate is written all over each world in our Solar System. It’s up to humanity to learn those lessons and decide what we do next. Ethan is on vacation. Please enjoy this older article from the Starts With A Bang archives!
How Long Do Cremated Ashes Last? Since cremation ashes are mostly made up of bone, and bones are not degradable, the ashes can last as long as a...
Read More »
Around the time they're able to attend elementary school, kids can experience their first crush. Some parents may feel blindsided by how early this...
Read More »
Men may sometimes blame others more and not fully accept their own shortcomings. Studies have found that men tend to deny their mistakes, minimize...
Read More »
You feel comfortable and at peace when that someone is around. Another sign that you and your partner are meant to be is the peace you feel in your...
Read More »