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Sendraks wrote:ScholasticSpastic wrote:Venus is closer to the sun, so one should expect that photodissociation would have contributed more than- or at least equally to- the abiotic origins of oxygen on Venus than on Earth. So where is Venus's oxygen? It has more than enough CO2 to make oxygen from abiotically, and the higher surface temperatures should be expected to aid the process.
This is fascinating and I'd like to know more about what is going on here, but chemistry isn't really my forte so I'm kind of reliant on interpreting what I read on Wikipedia at face value. From wiki page on Venusian atmosphere, I'm seeing that oxygen is getting drawn into the sulphuric acid cycle in the atmosphere. Would this explain where the oxygen is going?
igorfrankensteen wrote:Please pardon my Historian-education ignorance about all this.
But, since it appears that this comes down to the claim that "Solar UV light" causes CO2 to turn into oxygen and either carbon monoxide, or oxygen and carbon, doesn't that mean that Global Warming could be reversed by encouraging another tanning salon fad? And maybe augment that with some really cool blacklight posters?
juju7 wrote:Cito di Pense wrote:All this says is that if you detect oxygen in the atmosphere of an extrasolar planet, it's not necessarily diagnostic of green plants down below. The tiny amounts of molecular oxygen that can be produced by, e.g., photodissociation of CO2 (not to mention H2O) will rapidly react with other molecular gases in the atmosphere, such as CO, CH4, H2S or atomic species which are even more reactive. Should that not be sufficient to convince you that not much free molecular oxygen will result, if there are any rocks on the planetary surface containing iron, there's another reservoir for soaking up molecular oxygen. Thus the concentration of oxygen in any planetary atmosphere above a planet not harboring green plants is likely to remain very, very low. Here on earth, the evolution of photosynthesis was a catastrophe for anaerobic bacteria. Earth's oxygen (at biologically-significant levels) is the outcome of photosynthesis. I don't think anyone participating in this thread will doubt this.
I do. You have failed to show that oxygen levels will be very low.
juju7 wrote:There could be an equilibrium between sulphur dioxide and sulphuric acid that takes up atmospheric oxygen.
ScholasticSpastic wrote:juju7 wrote:There could be an equilibrium between sulphur dioxide and sulphuric acid that takes up atmospheric oxygen.
The existence of such an equilibrium is insufficient by itself to explain where the oxygen goes. If the oxygen is used up by the formation of sulfuric acid, but released by reformation of sulfur dioxide, then we should expect to see no net increase or decrease of oxygen as a result of the equilibrium. In order to function as a net oxygen sink, this equilibrium would need to be coupled to something which was not at equilibrium and involved irrecoverable precipitation of the oxygen from the atmosphere.
The definition of an equilibrium is that there is no net change in the relative concentrations of the reactants and products. The forward and reverse reactions occur at the same rates.
To lose a reactant you need a system that is not at equilibrium.
juju7 wrote:
Obviously. Therefore if oxygen is produced, and SO4 is present, the oxygen will be removed until it reaches equilibrium.
Calilasseia wrote: Fe2+ ions in particular aren't usually very soluble in oygenated water, and banded iron formations could therefore only have formed in anoxic conditions.
Discovery of an oxygen white dwarf
The vast majority of stars will eventually evolve into a white dwarf, a small, hot, and extremely dense object made of leftover material from the star's core. Stellar evolution theory suggests that white dwarfs should be mostly made of helium, carbon, or oxygen, but even a tiny amount of hydrogen or helium floats to the surface and hides the underlying composition. Kepler et al. searched through thousands of white dwarf spectra and discovered one that has an atmosphere dominated by oxygen, with no contamination by hydrogen or helium (see the Perspective by Gänsicke). This pristine object confirms the long-postulated theory and will be an important test case for stellar evolution.
A white dwarf with an oxygen atmosphere
S. O. Kepler1,
Detlev Koester2,
Gustavo Ourique1
Abstract
Stars born with masses below around 10 solar masses end their lives as white dwarf stars. Their atmospheres are dominated by the lightest elements because gravitational diffusion brings the lightest element to the surface. We report the discovery of a white dwarf with an atmosphere completely dominated by oxygen, SDSS J124043.01+671034.68. After oxygen, the next most abundant elements in its atmosphere are neon and magnesium, but these are lower by a factor of ≥25 by number. The fact that no hydrogen or helium are observed is surprising. Oxygen, neon, and magnesium are the products of carbon burning, which occurs in stars at the high-mass end of pre–white dwarf formation. This star, a possible oxygen-neon white dwarf, will provide a rare observational test of the evolutionary paths toward white dwarfs.
Far enough to resolve the planet from the star in an image.newolder wrote:Far enough for what to happen?
It doesn't. I was thinking of planets without life that nevertheless have oxygen in their atmsphere, OK?How far is that? Do white dwarf stars have stellar winds? How does any of this white dwarf stuff connect with a new possible source for Earth's oxygen?
I thought the issue was whether you could have a lifeless planet that had oxygen in its atmosphere in spite of that fact.Who mentioned 'without life'?
What's occurring? Are you my nurse?]Where's my medication?
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