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Posted

I'm not sure why you would postulate an atmosphere of pure helium, any planet large enough or massive enough to hold onto helium would almost certainly have lots of neon, hydrogen, methane, CO and CO2, nitrogen and or nitrogen compounds as well, oxygen if it has life that is photosynthetic.

Posted

I'm not sure why you would postulate an atmosphere of pure helium, any planet large enough or massive enough to hold onto helium would almost certainly have lots of neon, hydrogen, methane, CO and CO2, nitrogen and or nitrogen compounds as well, oxygen if it has life that is photosynthetic.

 

What I wanted to know is what would the planet's temperature be?

Posted (edited)

teh hydrogen could be entirely converted to metallic hydrogen and teh heavier gases could sink to the very bottom of the atmopshere.

 

I would like to know what the temperature would be right above those heavier elements.

Edited by granpa
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I thought we were talking about this:

I can't access it either, but I can read the last bit where it says they couldn't observe any IR absorption at all.

 

Helium really shouldn't have any IR activity (nor visible nor microwave nor UV up to fairly high energy)

Posted

thats really interesting.

 

I was assuming that 10,000 km of liquid helium would be far too thick but now I'm not so sure.

Posted

If you wanted a blanket on your bed to keep you warm, would you want it to be a good conductor, or a bad conductor, of heat?

 

So if I had more helium in my blood I'd get more heat drawn into my body?

Posted

Do you understand what is meant when something is said to be a good conductor of heat? I suppose what I am getting at is, could you explain what you think it means, as I rather suspect that you don't (no offense intended).

Posted

Conductor in this case isn't the same as a lightning conductor. It doesn't draw heat towards it.

It might help if you actually answered the question I asked.

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