RecoveringYuppy
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2006
- Messages
- 14,185
Oxygen can disolve in water, and anything on the ocean floor can still react with that oxygen. Being covered in water doesn't prevent oxidation.
Yeah, I thought about that and also that dissolved material in the ocean might oxidize. Even if you add the requirement that the sea floor be oxidized it doesn't seem to be an obstacle to the conclusion that there could be planets with enough water to overwhelm the available surface oxygen sinks.
I didn't think about this too hard but there seem to be a couple of factors that are overwhelming: gaseous hydrogen is easily stripped from the surface of a planet; oxygen is the third most common element; the vast majority of oxygen sinks are in the core of the planet.
Not sure if I'm right about that last assumption. I think it's the current consensus that the core and outer core are oxygen deficient.
Isn't it the case now on Earth that the surface (land and sea floor) are nearly completely oxidized?
Biomass seems to be about two or three orders of magnitude short of being a sufficient sink.
Of course, there is also the simple point that oxygen on a planet around a star that isn't particular bright in UV wouldn't be explained by this mechanism.