HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
Considering that the critical point is 374 Celsius and well over 200 atmospheres pressure, I'd say you're pretty safe. I don't think many pressure cookers can do that 
I suppose that means I should avoid setting my pressure cooker to supercritical, unless I want to make soup.
I didn't know that.
I suppose that means I should avoid setting my pressure cooker to supercritical, unless I want to make soup.
....
I disagree. Perhaps it's time to call the MythBusters in on this one.
.Actually, let me return to one aspect I haven't explored of the hypothesis that there was that much water floating in the atmosphere.
For a start, when you have 1000 times more water up their than air to hold it up, it can't be clouds, because no amount of convection of the tiny amount of air will hold it up. It's just too heavy. Most of it will therefore have to be vapour. Sorta. I'll get to it.
But the more you increase pressure, the more water likes to stay a liquid, pretty much. About a quarter of the way to what we calculated before, you reach the level of the critical point of water. The only way to also have it stay vapour, is to also have a temperature above that point: over 374 °C, or 705 °F for you imperials.
Well, when I say "vapour", I mean supercritical fluid, with some traces of nitrogen and oxygen dissolved in it.
Effectively making Earth a gas giant, albeit one with a tiny rocky core.
ETA: oh, btw, supercritical water is also a very good solvent for biological stuff. In case the pressure and temperature and lack of oxygen didn't kill you, that certainly would.
Sure. But god didn't commission a boat builder. He beamed his message down to some hundreds-of-years-old git in the middle of nowhere who had as much experience at boat building as Peter Rabbit.Most boats have windows or portholes for looking out of. For ventilation they use vents, hatches, louvers, wind scoops or dorades. These allow air to be circulated without letting water in. Now if I commissioned a boat builder to make me a boat, I would expect him to include suitable ventilation devices without having to to tell him specifically what, where, and how many to install.
.
Pendant!![]()
.
And the tops of the clouds would reflect most of the sunlight, almost none at all getting through to ground level to nurture all those planets.
On the other hand, the water tanks they'd need to save some of the marine and river stuff would more than make up for that.
[...]
So, yeah, I hope the Lord also told Noah how to make a scuba suit and go collecting all species of shells and crabs and whatnot that live in the waters![]()
Not only that, but nowhere does it say that all the animals were adults. For example, a fully grown African Elephant can weigh over 7,000kg, but a new-born calf is only about 120kg.
Many reptiles and birds could have been taken on board while still in the egg. Also in some cases it may not have been necessary to take the whole animal. A worm can be cut in half and still survive, a giraffe with no legs is still a giraffe.
Oh? Where would you put the animals, then?
Besides that, nowhere in the Bible does it says that all the flood waters mixed with the oceans. Even if only a few pockets of salt and fresh water remained, it might still have been enough to keep alive a few individuals from each species.
No, but I don't have to be. It's generally obvious when the Bible is being specific and when it's being general, like in most books.And you are some sort of authority on which is which?
This is all based on the idea that the entire globe was filled up over the tops of the tallest mountains (and assuming they were the same height as they are today). However nobody has any proof that this happened. Since such an event is (as you showed) highly improbable, I worked on the assumption that the Flood was actually more like actual floods that we know of (eg. the 1931 China floods which killed 4 million people) and that Noah was mistaken about how deep it was.Didn't see your calculations, but they're wrong. The average elevation above sea level is ~250m, which leaves around 8500m to fill up. This means 8500000 l/m2*. Over 40 days that represents 8855 l/h. that's almost 9m/m2/h of precipitation.
Sorry, but nowhere does the Bible say that the Earth is 'flat'. Some people have interpreted it to mean that, but others point out that the Earth was known to be round since long before the Bible was written. But anyway, if it was flat then that means everything we think we know about it is wrong, so any calculations based on mountain height, surface area etc. are probably wrong too.*not accounting for the excess water needed due to the shape of the Earth, since according to the Bible it's flat.
But He didn't (at least not according to the Bible), and who are we to second-guess why? Whatever His reasons, it just doesn't make sense that He would instruct Noah to build an Ark for the purpose of saving all the animals, then create weather conditions which ensured that it would be destroyed.Yes, but then don't try to pretend that there's any validity to it. God could have allowed a papier mâché Aark to survive a fire, and then a hurricane.
So which is it? Are we considering the real world where an Ark would only have to navigate normal flood waters, or a fantasy one that has 8500000l/m2 over the entire world? This thread is supposed to be about whether the Ark would float, not be able to survive a ridiculous scenario that makes Waterworld look like a documentary.because divine intervention doesn't count when you're talking about the real world.
In my experience, many people are good at invoking science to prove that such-and-such is impossible, then when their theory is tested in the real world it turns out to be flawed. Mythbusters have a reputation for taking both seemingly impossible scenarios and 'scientific' objections, and showing whether they are true or false in the real world.I care almost as little about your disagreement as Physics does.
No, but I don't have to be. It's generally obvious when the Bible is being specific and when it's being general, like in most books.
This is all based on the idea that the entire globe was filled up over the tops of the tallest mountains (and assuming they were the same height as they are today). However nobody has any proof that this happened. Since such an event is (as you showed) highly improbable, I worked on the assumption that the Flood was actually more like actual floods that we know of (eg. the 1931 China floods which killed 4 million people) and that Noah was mistaken about how deep it was.
Sorry, but nowhere does the Bible say that the Earth is 'flat'. Some people have interpreted it to mean that, but others point out that the Earth was known to be round since long before the Bible was written. But anyway, if it was flat then that means everything we think we know about it is wrong, so any calculations based on mountain height, surface area etc. are probably wrong too.
But He didn't (at least not according to the Bible), and who are we to second-guess why? Whatever His reasons, it just doesn't make sense that He would instruct Noah to build an Ark for the purpose of saving all the animals, then create weather conditions which ensured that it would be destroyed.
It may be hard for people who need to be force-fed every little detail of a story because they can't fill in the gaps, but the Bible would be 10 times longer and extremely tiresome if it was written like that. So why can't we just assume that God knew what He was doing and had all his bases covered?
So which is it? Are we considering the real world where an Ark would only have to navigate normal flood waters, or a fantasy one that has 8500000l/m2 over the entire world? This thread is supposed to be about whether the Ark would float, not be able to survive a ridiculous scenario that makes Waterworld look like a documentary.
In my experience, many people are good at invoking science to prove that such-and-such is impossible, then when their theory is tested in the real world it turns out to be flawed. Mythbusters have a reputation for taking both seemingly impossible scenarios and 'scientific' objections, and showing whether they are true or false in the real world.
But here we have posters making 'scientific' assertions about boat construction and stresses without any supporting evidence. They remind me of those people who used 'science' to prove that an airplane can't take off from a conveyer belt, or that a yacht can't make headway by blowing on its own sail.
.... Noah was mistaken about how deep it was.
...
'whoops!No, but I don't have to be. It's generally obvious when the Bible is being specific and when it's being general, like in most books.
This is all based on the idea that the entire globe was filled up over the tops of the tallest mountains (and assuming they were the same height as they are today). However nobody has any proof that this happened. Since such an event is (as you showed) highly improbable, I worked on the assumption ....
Yes, I think everybody here knows that. So why we can't drop this silly requirement that the Ark that has to handle outlandish fictional weather, and just concentrate on whether it could float?.
Noah is a character in a fictional story copied from a much older fictional story.
No, but I don't have to be. It's generally obvious when the Bible is being specific and when it's being general, like in most books.
This is all based on the idea that the entire globe was filled up over the tops of the tallest mountains (and assuming they were the same height as they are today). However nobody has any proof that this happened. Since such an event is (as you showed) highly improbable, I worked on the assumption that the Flood was actually more like actual floods that we know of (eg. the 1931 China floods which killed 4 million people) and that Noah was mistaken about how deep it was.
Sorry, but nowhere does the Bible say that the Earth is 'flat'. Some people have interpreted it to mean that, but others point out that the Earth was known to be round since long before the Bible was written. But anyway, if it was flat then that means everything we think we know about it is wrong, so any calculations based on mountain height, surface area etc. are probably wrong too.
But He didn't (at least not according to the Bible), and who are we to second-guess why? Whatever His reasons, it just doesn't make sense that He would instruct Noah to build an Ark for the purpose of saving all the animals, then create weather conditions which ensured that it would be destroyed.
It may be hard for people who need to be force-fed every little detail of a story because they can't fill in the gaps, but the Bible would be 10 times longer and extremely tiresome if it was written like that. So why can't we just assume that God knew what He was doing and had all his bases covered?
So which is it? Are we considering the real world where an Ark would only have to navigate normal flood waters, or a fantasy one that has 8500000l/m2 over the entire world? This thread is supposed to be about whether the Ark would float, not be able to survive a ridiculous scenario that makes Waterworld look like a documentary.
In my experience, many people are good at invoking science to prove that such-and-such is impossible, then when their theory is tested in the real world it turns out to be flawed. Mythbusters have a reputation for taking both seemingly impossible scenarios and 'scientific' objections, and showing whether they are true or false in the real world.
But here we have posters making 'scientific' assertions about boat construction and stresses without any supporting evidence. They remind me of those people who used 'science' to prove that an airplane can't take off from a conveyer belt, or that a yacht can't make headway by blowing on its own sail.
So let's get over the fact that the Bible isn't literally true, and consider whether if an Ark was made that met the specifications in the Bible, could it (theoretically) float or not? So far I haven't seen any scientific argument that it couldn't, just bald assertions such as 'the hull couldn't take the pressure' without any supporting figures.
Point taken, but where do we separate speculation from reality here? Do we say it could have floated even though it could not be built? If the specifications call for a structure that cannot have been made as specified, what is it that floats? To begin with, we cannot take your approach and then significantly modify the specifications handed down, and that means our ark cannot be simply a barge. It must be three hundred cubits long, 50 wide, and thirty cubits tall and have three decks.Yes, I think everybody here knows that. So why we can't drop this silly requirement that the Ark that has to handle outlandish fictional weather, and just concentrate on whether it could float?
In the Epic of Gilgamesh a flood was invoked by 'gods' who inhabited a city on the banks of the Euphrates. Gilgamesh's 'boat' was a square box 120 cubits on each side, which was difficult to launch but "Erragal pulled out the mooring poles, forth went Ninurta and made the dikes overflow." This little detail shows that the ancients weren't complete idiots, and knew how to launch a large barge (hint, don't wait for a storm). But this story too is obvious fiction.
So let's get over the fact that the Bible isn't literally true, and consider whether if an Ark was made that met the specifications in the Bible, could it (theoretically) float or not? So far I haven't seen any scientific argument that it couldn't, just bald assertions such as 'the hull couldn't take the pressure' without any supporting figures.