by Nitpicker » Mon Sep 12, 2016 12:25 am
A comment slightly modified from one I made in an earlier APOD featuring this image:
There is a large amount of water on Earth, in relation to the habitable volume of Earth. What the APOD really shows is that the total volume of Earth is so much (~600 times) bigger than the habitable volume of Earth. If we make the simple assumption that all of the Earth's water (1386 million km3) is habitable and make the further (even simpler) assumption that the lowest 1 km of atmosphere above the whole Earth's surface (510 million km3) is habitable, then (ignoring the volume of any subterranean habitable space, which I've just lumped in with the somewhat arbitrary habitable atmospheric volume), all of the Earth's water represents 73% of the habitable volume of Earth. The remaining volume of Earth is not habitable, but I am glad it is there, as its vast mass gives we surface dwellers an acceleration due to gravity of about 10 metres per second per second, of which I, for one, am rather fond.
The fact is that sea levels are predicted to rise in the coming centuries, by amounts expected to cause all sorts of problems for humanity. This appears to be at odds with the notion that there isn't that much water on Earth. Change is good for life in general, but not necessarily for human life in this particular instance. If one considers only the habitable volume of Earth, it could be considered to be a "water world" of sorts.
A comment slightly modified from one I made in an earlier APOD featuring this image:
There is a large amount of water on Earth, in relation to the habitable volume of Earth. What the APOD really shows is that the [u]total volume[/u] of Earth is so much (~600 times) bigger than the [u]habitable volume[/u] of Earth. If we make the simple assumption that all of the Earth's water (1386 million km[sup]3[/sup]) is habitable and make the further (even simpler) assumption that the lowest 1 km of atmosphere above the whole Earth's surface (510 million km[sup]3[/sup]) is habitable, then (ignoring the volume of any subterranean habitable space, which I've just lumped in with the somewhat arbitrary habitable atmospheric volume), all of the Earth's water represents 73% of the habitable volume of Earth. The remaining volume of Earth is not habitable, but I am glad it is there, as its vast mass gives we surface dwellers an acceleration due to gravity of about 10 metres per second per second, of which I, for one, am rather fond.
The fact is that sea levels are predicted to rise in the coming centuries, by amounts expected to cause all sorts of problems for humanity. This appears to be at odds with the notion that there isn't that much water on Earth. Change is good for life in general, but not necessarily for human life in this particular instance. If one considers only the habitable volume of Earth, it could be considered to be a "water world" of sorts.