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Supermop2000 t1_j8uidk8 wrote

No, it would destabilise the solar system. If you mean a heat source with no gravitational influence, then still no; it would just turn Mars into a hot wasteland instead of a cold one, since Mars has no magnetosphere to protect biological systems from solar radiation.

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Lampposthead2526 t1_j8usuwi wrote

Just a question, how does one get a magnetosphere?

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DeezNeezuts t1_j8uuiae wrote

Your gonna have to eat a shit load of iron and nickel and spin really fast.

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AvcalmQ t1_j8uvyqg wrote

"Not too fast though, and you gotta be real hot. Not too hot though, and you gotta have layers, like an onion. Not sure if you can have too many layers, but you don't wanna be an onion anyway."

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Lampposthead2526 t1_j8v874x wrote

So what your saying is that it’s possible.

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baphosam t1_j8w2lyq wrote

Possible when we can harvest galactic Amounts of resources and the notion of Terraforming is less fiction.

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EarthSolar t1_j8v5wkc wrote

please don’t try to get yourself a personal magnetosphere. It’s not worth it.

Jokes aside, I believe we’re not really sure how and why intrinsic magnetospheres show up on Earth and Mercury but not Venus and Mars (which have induced ones which block solar wind better instead). Mercury, Earth, and Mars are all known to have liquid core, but it seems Mars’ core isn’t convecting and thus no dynamo.

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YesWeHaveNoTomatoes t1_j8v7kyx wrote

My understanding is that the problem for Mars and Mercury was that they aren't massive enough to keep their cores hot, so as the cores cooled their planetary dynamos slowed and the magnetospheres dissipated.

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EarthSolar t1_j8vxf6s wrote

Mercury is known to have a magnetosphere (albeit a weak one). by the way.

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Lampposthead2526 t1_j8v8ued wrote

I don’t have much to say but I like your comment. I didn’t know Mercury has, maybe in some part, a liquid core. Been writing some stuff about Mercury as usual. I found it fascinating in a sense for storytelling wise, a leftover planet. Anyways writing is a whole other tangent lol. Mercury mining while being landlocked by Venus due to technology not advanced enough to drive past planets. I need more world building lol.

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EarthSolar t1_j8vxjz2 wrote

It's a little funny to hear Mercury mining now that I know it's weirdly iron-poor on the surface. Despite having the highest core fraction, its surface is really lacking in that stuff. I wonder what resources can be found on the Mercurian surface - I recall carbon is one, but not sure about other stuff aside from the usual silicates.

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HaphazardlyOrganized t1_j8uxelc wrote

The dynamo effect. Theoretically if you take a bunch of metallic elements and make them really hot and spinny you get a big ole magnetic field.

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Takeyouonajourney9 t1_j8v2jae wrote

Take a planet with a molten center and smash another planet, preferably with water on it into it.. as the internet has led me to believe..

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EarthSolar t1_j8v5kjp wrote

The atmosphere blocks radiation well enough on its own, thanks. An intrinsic magnetosphere doesn’t really protect the atmosphere either.

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Supermop2000 t1_j8zfyq6 wrote

come back when Mars has an atmosphere - already stripped away... cos no magnetosphere :P

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EarthSolar t1_j8zloa8 wrote

Got it - you have no intention of learning. Hope your bubble is at least fun to stay in.

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Supermop2000 t1_j90rph6 wrote

My really, that's not very mature now is it.

Your post mentioned nothing about protection from solar radiation, only that planets without magnetospheres could hold their atmosphere longer than originally thought. If doesn't specify whether longer or not with a magnetosphere, nor whether it would deflect harmful radiation, so get off ya high horse.

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