by Qev » Fri Aug 04, 2006 2:48 am
Yup, Harry, along the continental edges of the sea floor here on Earth, we have huge deposits of clathrates, also known as methane hydrates. You can find pictures of the stuff online, it's very peculiar: it looks very much like white ice. Amusingly, it's ice that, if you touch a match to it, will burn and melt at the same time (the heat breaks down the clathrate, producing water and methane gas, which promptly burns).
On a tangental note, these clathrates are a possible risk in the global warming scenario. If the ocean temperatures rise by even a relatively small amount, the clathrates can break down, triggering a massive release of methane, which is a very potent greenhouse gas, possibly leading to a sort of accelerating feedback loop of global warming. Unpleasant thought.
Titan could probably use some global warming though.
dcmcp: Regarding oxygen and a methane atmosphere, from a chemistry standpoint 'burning' is the process of rapid, exothermic oxidation (loss of electrons), so oxygen itself never technically burns, since it's the one gobbling up the electrons. But I'm just picking nits.
Yup, Harry, along the continental edges of the sea floor here on Earth, we have huge deposits of clathrates, also known as methane hydrates. You can find pictures of the stuff online, it's very peculiar: it looks very much like white ice. Amusingly, it's ice that, if you touch a match to it, will burn and melt at the same time (the heat breaks down the clathrate, producing water and methane gas, which promptly burns).
On a tangental note, these clathrates are a possible risk in the global warming scenario. If the ocean temperatures rise by even a relatively small amount, the clathrates can break down, triggering a massive release of methane, which is a very potent greenhouse gas, possibly leading to a sort of accelerating feedback loop of global warming. Unpleasant thought.
Titan could probably use some global warming though. :lol:
dcmcp: Regarding oxygen and a methane atmosphere, from a chemistry standpoint 'burning' is the process of rapid, exothermic oxidation (loss of electrons), so oxygen itself never technically burns, since it's the one gobbling up the electrons. But I'm just picking nits. :)