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  4. What ice mountain height would a base at liquid nitrogen temperature support?
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What ice mountain height would a base at liquid nitrogen temperature support?

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Offline MarsDog (OP)

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What ice mountain height would a base at liquid nitrogen temperature support?
« on: 08/04/2006 06:22:47 »
I am trying to figure out maximum height a given diameter base
can support, cooled to liquid nitrogen temperature.

Cannot find strain rate data for ice at very low temperatures and high pressures, into the TPa range.

Can the 1 : 1 1/2 max stable slope of sand dunes be used ?

Resulting shape parabolic as in ice fields ?

Exponential taper as in scale height ?


« Last Edit: 17/07/2017 18:01:12 by chris »
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Offline JimBob

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Re: What ice mountain height would a base at liquid nitrogen temperature support?
« Reply #1 on: 14/04/2006 00:22:23 »
Temp has little to do with Ice. It will flow in 70 F below 0. (Antartica) This is because of pin-point pressure "melting" within the crystal structure of the ice. I do not know about physical properties of ice in another planetary system but suspect it very much is the same. Ice (H2O) ridges on moons of outer planets show the same behavior I would expect on earth.

Sand MAY NOT be used. Totally different properties. Use the strain data you have for terristrial conditions. Find out from NASA or JPL what data they have.

Thanks for your participation. In the future, more precise questions and full sentences with a clearly stated objective will help to get your questions answered more timely and more fully.

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