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All right then, so we agree that water in itself won't destroy hydrogen cyanide or formaldehyde. So what about those catalysts you speak of? Which ones in particular did you have in mind?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 12/05/2020 20:02:10Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 19:34:34The high temperatures to create lava come mostly from the decay of radioactive isotopes. Larger bodies lose heat more slowly so become hotter.Ok, let's make an assumption- there's the same percentage radioactive "stuff" in Vesta as in Earth.It's questionable but it's a start.Vesta is small- radius 263 km.Earth's much bigger 6,371 kmVesta has about 4% of the radius of EarthSo it's got about 0.04^3 of the amount of heat generation.But 0.04^2 times the area So the heat per square metre is only about 4% of that of the Earth.And much of the water on Earth is frozen, even though the Earth's near the Sun..So the heat output from Vesta wouldn't be enough to thaw the water, would it?Vesta was hot enough to melt. Its surface is igneous. There was a lot of radioactive aluminum-26 in the early Solar system.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 19:34:34The high temperatures to create lava come mostly from the decay of radioactive isotopes. Larger bodies lose heat more slowly so become hotter.Ok, let's make an assumption- there's the same percentage radioactive "stuff" in Vesta as in Earth.It's questionable but it's a start.Vesta is small- radius 263 km.Earth's much bigger 6,371 kmVesta has about 4% of the radius of EarthSo it's got about 0.04^3 of the amount of heat generation.But 0.04^2 times the area So the heat per square metre is only about 4% of that of the Earth.And much of the water on Earth is frozen, even though the Earth's near the Sun..So the heat output from Vesta wouldn't be enough to thaw the water, would it?
The high temperatures to create lava come mostly from the decay of radioactive isotopes. Larger bodies lose heat more slowly so become hotter.
Minerals with transition metals.
There was a lot of radioactive aluminum-26 in the early Solar system.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 20:23:32Minerals with transition metals.Which raises some further questions:(1) How fast is the breakdown process? Is it faster than the rate that formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide can accumulate in them?
(2) Would all warm springs on Earth have necessarily had such minerals in them (at least in the quantities needed to destroy those organic molecules)?
(3) Why would your hypothetical satellite be exempt from having transition metal minerals in its same warm springs?
On Earth clearly.
Irrelevant.
The springs would have required transition metal minerals for the protobiological reactions to work. We can tell which minerals these were from enzymatic cofactors. They are typical of hydrothermal deposits.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 19:34:34Vesta was hot enough to melt. Its surface is igneous. There was a lot of radioactive aluminum-26 in the early Solar system.OK, so it was bone dry.And, like dry bones, devoid of life.
Vesta was hot enough to melt. Its surface is igneous. There was a lot of radioactive aluminum-26 in the early Solar system.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 20:20:13There was a lot of radioactive aluminum-26 in the early Solar system.Where from?
Where did it go?
If there was enough 26Al to melt Vesta then what happened on Earth?It's about 25 times bigger so (for the same composition) that's a 25 fold higher power density at the surface.That needs to be radiated off as heat.Radiative cooling scales as the 4th power of the temperature.So 25 times more power per square meter needs a temperature 25^ 0.25= about 2.3 times higherRocks- quartz for example- melt at about 1700C or 2000 KAnd if the temperature of VEsta reached that, the temperature of Earth should have reached about 4500KBut quartz boils at about 2300CSo, if the heat generation in Vega was high enough to melt it, the temperature of the Earth should have been high enough to boil it.We are here.It didn't boil.
It decayed.
its former carbonaceous satellite.
More crackpot thinking - More heat mainly means longer cooling time.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:16:06 its former carbonaceous satellite.Remind me; what's the physical evidence for the existence of that satellite?
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:16:06It decayed.NoIf it decayed then it made magnesium 26, but there's not much of that.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:16:06More crackpot thinking - More heat mainly means longer cooling time.Longer cooling time, yes, but it also means that the object in question becomes hotter because heat is being produced at a faster rate than it can be radiated. That's how scaling laws work.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 20:52:54On Earth clearly.Clearly, how? Can you support that statement?
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 20:52:54Irrelevant.How can it be irrelevant when that's the entire point of the discussion?
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 20:52:54The springs would have required transition metal minerals for the protobiological reactions to work. We can tell which minerals these were from enzymatic cofactors. They are typical of hydrothermal deposits.So let me get this straight. You claim that water plus transition metal minerals on Earth are bad because they cause the breakdown of hydrogen cyanide and formaldehyde, while at the same time you claim that the presence of water plus transition metal minerals on your satellite is good because they allow for needed chemical reactions. Are the laws of physics different on your satellite or something? You can't have it both ways. If one is bad on Earth, it must be bad on your satellite. If it is good on your satellite, it must be good on Earth as well.
astrobiology.
Spectra of Vesta and the moons of Mars in concert with carbonaceous meteorites
Its irrelevant because the chemicals in question would be nearly completely destroyed before
More crackpot thinking
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:38:15astrobiology.I asked for physical evidence.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:38:15Spectra of Vesta and the moons of Mars in concert with carbonaceous meteoritesWould you like to expand on that?(I'm a spectroscopist, btw)
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:59:31Its irrelevant because the chemicals in question would be nearly completely destroyed beforeBy what?
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:16:06More crackpot thinkingI'm glad I made you think.Now, do you plan to refute the maths?
Yes. It is true for any plausible early Earth atmosphere. I am not going to get into a long discourse on atmospheric models, however.Its irrelevant because the chemicals in question would be nearly completely destroyed before they got into any spring on Earth.
The difference is that the Earth has an atmosphere so we are talking about the whole planet while on the satellite we are just talking about the spring.
Quote from: larens on 12/05/2020 21:59:31Yes. It is true for any plausible early Earth atmosphere. I am not going to get into a long discourse on atmospheric models, however.Its irrelevant because the chemicals in question would be nearly completely destroyed before they got into any spring on Earth.There aren't any transition metal minerals in the atmosphere and we've already agreed that water doesn't destroy them on its own. So what destructive mechanism are you talking about?
Would you like to enlighten me on:(1) how an atmosphere has anything to do with whether or not there are transition metal minerals present, and
(2) how that answers the question of whether transition metal minerals are good or bad for the formation of life?
Any water in a spring on Earth or on a planet with an evaporative hydrological cycle will have gone through an aquifer which will have had transition metal minerals
When still in the atmosphere they will be oxidized if oxygen is present. Oxygen may be generated by the UV dissociation of water and escape of the hydrogen. If oxygen is not present, there will be no ozone so the low altitude UV creation of reactive molecules will be even more intense.
They are necessary, but organic precursors need to kept dry until they get to the protobiological site.
Quote from: larens on 13/05/2020 01:48:58Any water in a spring on Earth or on a planet with an evaporative hydrological cycle will have gone through an aquifer which will have had transition metal mineralsWhy must that be so? Why must an underground water supply on Earth have those minerals but your satellite does not?
Quote from: larens on 13/05/2020 01:48:58When still in the atmosphere they will be oxidized if oxygen is present. Oxygen may be generated by the UV dissociation of water and escape of the hydrogen. If oxygen is not present, there will be no ozone so the low altitude UV creation of reactive molecules will be even more intense.You may not have seen my edit, but I addressed those in my prior post.
Quote from: larens on 13/05/2020 01:48:58They are necessary, but organic precursors need to kept dry until they get to the protobiological site.Which means the other mechanism I mentioned (carbonaceous chondrites delivering those materials to Earth) can still work.