Could a terrestrial planet have water for a core?












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There’s a planet called eaglypt whose surface is 100% barren desert. However, there is a twist: the planet’s core consists of liquid water, and there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where civilizations can spring up, using the oases for irrigation. Is this realistic for a planet to exist like this or would it take serious artistic license for it to exist?










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    Putting aside the impossibility of a water core and a surface of rock & sand, how does life evolve without large areas of liquid water? Your best bet would be a Mars-like planet, which started out with significant water but lost most of it.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:21
















4












$begingroup$


There’s a planet called eaglypt whose surface is 100% barren desert. However, there is a twist: the planet’s core consists of liquid water, and there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where civilizations can spring up, using the oases for irrigation. Is this realistic for a planet to exist like this or would it take serious artistic license for it to exist?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Putting aside the impossibility of a water core and a surface of rock & sand, how does life evolve without large areas of liquid water? Your best bet would be a Mars-like planet, which started out with significant water but lost most of it.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:21














4












4








4





$begingroup$


There’s a planet called eaglypt whose surface is 100% barren desert. However, there is a twist: the planet’s core consists of liquid water, and there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where civilizations can spring up, using the oases for irrigation. Is this realistic for a planet to exist like this or would it take serious artistic license for it to exist?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




There’s a planet called eaglypt whose surface is 100% barren desert. However, there is a twist: the planet’s core consists of liquid water, and there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where civilizations can spring up, using the oases for irrigation. Is this realistic for a planet to exist like this or would it take serious artistic license for it to exist?







reality-check planets water deserts






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share|improve this question













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edited Jan 20 at 20:40









L.Dutch

81.7k27196401




81.7k27196401










asked Jan 20 at 20:38









The Weasel SagasThe Weasel Sagas

1,212121




1,212121








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Putting aside the impossibility of a water core and a surface of rock & sand, how does life evolve without large areas of liquid water? Your best bet would be a Mars-like planet, which started out with significant water but lost most of it.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:21














  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Putting aside the impossibility of a water core and a surface of rock & sand, how does life evolve without large areas of liquid water? Your best bet would be a Mars-like planet, which started out with significant water but lost most of it.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:21








1




1




$begingroup$
Putting aside the impossibility of a water core and a surface of rock & sand, how does life evolve without large areas of liquid water? Your best bet would be a Mars-like planet, which started out with significant water but lost most of it.
$endgroup$
– jamesqf
Jan 21 at 4:21




$begingroup$
Putting aside the impossibility of a water core and a surface of rock & sand, how does life evolve without large areas of liquid water? Your best bet would be a Mars-like planet, which started out with significant water but lost most of it.
$endgroup$
– jamesqf
Jan 21 at 4:21










4 Answers
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Water cannot remain fluid at the pressures of a terrestrial planet's core. However, it doesn't need to for your setting to be viable. The planet's crust could simply possess large, deep aquifers that provide water to oases. Some good examples of large aquifers beneath a desert are Australia's Great Artesian Basin, and the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System.






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  • 2




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    What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    Jan 21 at 2:58










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    @Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:07










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    You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:18






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    @Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:25





















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For water to be at the core of the planet, it must mean that there are no other elements or components which are denser than water.



Now, water is pretty dense, but nowhere dense as most of the metals or oxides.



It can happen that only light elements are collected by gravity, but such a planet could not host life as we know it: no magnetic field to shield stellar wind, just to cite one big difference.






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    Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
    $endgroup$
    – R..
    Jan 21 at 1:10






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    @R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:18



















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Yes. Water for a core, mantle and crust.



cold desert



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert




Polar deserts are a particular class of cold desert. The air is very
cold and carries little moisture so little precipitation occurs and
what does fall, usually snow, is carried along in the often strong
wind and may form blizzards, drifts and dunes similar to those caused
by dust and sand in other desert regions.




Your water world is dry on top because it is cold. Below the packed snow is ice, and more ice, and very eventually you will get down to liquid water. From OP




there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and
reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where
civilizations can spring up....




These hydrothermal springs come up thru cracks in the ice and sometimes can form pools of liquid water - very, very deep pools.



As regards a magnetosphere - I can think of no reason a water world should not have a magnetosphere. Salt water is a fine conductor of electricity and just as the moving metal of our world generates a magnetosphere to shield us from the solar wind, so too the salt water of your world's interior.



As regards those deep pools - it is a cold, dry, hardscrabble desert topside. Not so underneath. Fueled by the deep heat of the core, the life of the subsurface water world is rich and varied, and the fishing can be very good once you can get through. But if you hook something that does not put up a fight, cut your line fast and get everyone clear of the edge. Whatever it is might be coming up to have a look.






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    We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:29



















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It would take serious artistic license to exist, but...



I do not believe a planet could naturally evolve into this state. The problem isn't actually pressure. People assume that the further down you go, the more pressure there is. It's true to an extent, but the closer to the center you get the less you experience gravity (zero gravity at the center!). Pressure is something that makes sense when you're talking about the crust or rigid mantle. But if it applied to the liquid core, every crack in the mantle would result in massive eruptions — but they don't.



On the other hand, what you do get is heat. We don't really have proof of what's at the center of our planet, but a century of science has given us some really good guesses. We guess that there's a solid core. It's spinning at a different speed compared to the crust. Everything in the middle is subject to tremendous friction. Result = super heated rock. We think.



From the perspective of "solid stuff slowly combines via gravity over bazillions of years until some fool stamps his feet and says, 'let's call it a planet,'" this model works very well — but it doesn't explain where water comes from and that's actually been something scientists have pondered for a long time.



So, let's pretend that your world started as a honking lot of water orbiting a newly forming star and it starts to gather via gravity...



Why not? It's your world. From this perspective your world has a very, very low average density. There may still be a solid core of stuff (almost everything sinks through water, which is a better than average argument against this, unless there's a honking lot of water) but the middle isn't molten rock, it's super heated water.



And when the crust breaks, what you get is steam.



The crust is similar to a Roman arch — it's all spun out such that the bedrock is very, very flat and uniform. There would be no mountains — no plate tectonics to speak of — hot water, unlike magma, doesn't have the mass to push the surface around, which means earthquakes are caused by the heating/cooling cycle of the sun and occur most often at what we would call the tropics of cancer and capricorn (latitudes of highest thermal gradient between the poles and the equator).



This has the potential of meaning a lot of aquifers, but I'm having trouble keeping the land a desert. Water + sunlight = life. It would have to be a closer-to-the-sun planet such that the heat would burn off the water and the life. The consequence (thanks to the humidity) would be a lot of clouds, storms, and the night-side would get cold.



At least that's what I think.






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    Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:11






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    The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:25








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    A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:31






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    Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
    $endgroup$
    – Geoffrey Brent
    Jan 21 at 3:04






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    You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:04













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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









10












$begingroup$

Water cannot remain fluid at the pressures of a terrestrial planet's core. However, it doesn't need to for your setting to be viable. The planet's crust could simply possess large, deep aquifers that provide water to oases. Some good examples of large aquifers beneath a desert are Australia's Great Artesian Basin, and the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 2




    $begingroup$
    What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    Jan 21 at 2:58










  • $begingroup$
    @Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:07










  • $begingroup$
    You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:18






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:25


















10












$begingroup$

Water cannot remain fluid at the pressures of a terrestrial planet's core. However, it doesn't need to for your setting to be viable. The planet's crust could simply possess large, deep aquifers that provide water to oases. Some good examples of large aquifers beneath a desert are Australia's Great Artesian Basin, and the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 2




    $begingroup$
    What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    Jan 21 at 2:58










  • $begingroup$
    @Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:07










  • $begingroup$
    You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:18






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:25
















10












10








10





$begingroup$

Water cannot remain fluid at the pressures of a terrestrial planet's core. However, it doesn't need to for your setting to be viable. The planet's crust could simply possess large, deep aquifers that provide water to oases. Some good examples of large aquifers beneath a desert are Australia's Great Artesian Basin, and the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



Water cannot remain fluid at the pressures of a terrestrial planet's core. However, it doesn't need to for your setting to be viable. The planet's crust could simply possess large, deep aquifers that provide water to oases. Some good examples of large aquifers beneath a desert are Australia's Great Artesian Basin, and the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 20 at 20:42









Arkenstein XIIArkenstein XII

2,627527




2,627527








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    Jan 21 at 2:58










  • $begingroup$
    @Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:07










  • $begingroup$
    You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:18






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:25
















  • 2




    $begingroup$
    What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    Jan 21 at 2:58










  • $begingroup$
    @Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:07










  • $begingroup$
    You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 21 at 4:18






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:25










2




2




$begingroup$
What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 21 at 2:58




$begingroup$
What happens to water at the pressure of a terrestrial planets core? For water I would think fluid would be the most compact phase.
$endgroup$
– Willk
Jan 21 at 2:58












$begingroup$
@Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 3:07




$begingroup$
@Willk It's a balance between temperature and pressure really, but for water, the most thermodynamically favourable phases at high pressures are various forms of exotic ice. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_VII
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 3:07












$begingroup$
You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
$endgroup$
– jamesqf
Jan 21 at 4:18




$begingroup$
You might also note that there are quite possibly aquifers on Mars, too, as evidenced by the linear streaks on some crater walls.
$endgroup$
– jamesqf
Jan 21 at 4:18




1




1




$begingroup$
@Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
$endgroup$
– Mark
Jan 21 at 5:25






$begingroup$
@Willk, the pressure at the Earth's core is around 350 GPa. At that pressure, the only possible phases are ice X, supercritical fluid (above 647 K), and possibly vapor (at a temperature of "absurdly hot"). The pressure's too high for liquid water.
$endgroup$
– Mark
Jan 21 at 5:25













5












$begingroup$

For water to be at the core of the planet, it must mean that there are no other elements or components which are denser than water.



Now, water is pretty dense, but nowhere dense as most of the metals or oxides.



It can happen that only light elements are collected by gravity, but such a planet could not host life as we know it: no magnetic field to shield stellar wind, just to cite one big difference.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
    $endgroup$
    – R..
    Jan 21 at 1:10






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:18
















5












$begingroup$

For water to be at the core of the planet, it must mean that there are no other elements or components which are denser than water.



Now, water is pretty dense, but nowhere dense as most of the metals or oxides.



It can happen that only light elements are collected by gravity, but such a planet could not host life as we know it: no magnetic field to shield stellar wind, just to cite one big difference.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
    $endgroup$
    – R..
    Jan 21 at 1:10






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:18














5












5








5





$begingroup$

For water to be at the core of the planet, it must mean that there are no other elements or components which are denser than water.



Now, water is pretty dense, but nowhere dense as most of the metals or oxides.



It can happen that only light elements are collected by gravity, but such a planet could not host life as we know it: no magnetic field to shield stellar wind, just to cite one big difference.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



For water to be at the core of the planet, it must mean that there are no other elements or components which are denser than water.



Now, water is pretty dense, but nowhere dense as most of the metals or oxides.



It can happen that only light elements are collected by gravity, but such a planet could not host life as we know it: no magnetic field to shield stellar wind, just to cite one big difference.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 20 at 20:43









L.DutchL.Dutch

81.7k27196401




81.7k27196401












  • $begingroup$
    Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
    $endgroup$
    – R..
    Jan 21 at 1:10






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:18


















  • $begingroup$
    Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
    $endgroup$
    – R..
    Jan 21 at 1:10






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:18
















$begingroup$
Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
$endgroup$
– R..
Jan 21 at 1:10




$begingroup$
Couldn't elements be present if they were bound in low-density compounds? Not sure if that would admit a magnetic field or not.
$endgroup$
– R..
Jan 21 at 1:10




1




1




$begingroup$
@R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
$endgroup$
– Mark
Jan 21 at 5:18




$begingroup$
@R.., the presence of water means that most of the elements present will be in the form of oxides, and these tend to be a good bit denser than water. (Think about it: most rocks are oxides, and very few rocks float.)
$endgroup$
– Mark
Jan 21 at 5:18











1












$begingroup$

Yes. Water for a core, mantle and crust.



cold desert



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert




Polar deserts are a particular class of cold desert. The air is very
cold and carries little moisture so little precipitation occurs and
what does fall, usually snow, is carried along in the often strong
wind and may form blizzards, drifts and dunes similar to those caused
by dust and sand in other desert regions.




Your water world is dry on top because it is cold. Below the packed snow is ice, and more ice, and very eventually you will get down to liquid water. From OP




there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and
reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where
civilizations can spring up....




These hydrothermal springs come up thru cracks in the ice and sometimes can form pools of liquid water - very, very deep pools.



As regards a magnetosphere - I can think of no reason a water world should not have a magnetosphere. Salt water is a fine conductor of electricity and just as the moving metal of our world generates a magnetosphere to shield us from the solar wind, so too the salt water of your world's interior.



As regards those deep pools - it is a cold, dry, hardscrabble desert topside. Not so underneath. Fueled by the deep heat of the core, the life of the subsurface water world is rich and varied, and the fishing can be very good once you can get through. But if you hook something that does not put up a fight, cut your line fast and get everyone clear of the edge. Whatever it is might be coming up to have a look.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:29
















1












$begingroup$

Yes. Water for a core, mantle and crust.



cold desert



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert




Polar deserts are a particular class of cold desert. The air is very
cold and carries little moisture so little precipitation occurs and
what does fall, usually snow, is carried along in the often strong
wind and may form blizzards, drifts and dunes similar to those caused
by dust and sand in other desert regions.




Your water world is dry on top because it is cold. Below the packed snow is ice, and more ice, and very eventually you will get down to liquid water. From OP




there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and
reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where
civilizations can spring up....




These hydrothermal springs come up thru cracks in the ice and sometimes can form pools of liquid water - very, very deep pools.



As regards a magnetosphere - I can think of no reason a water world should not have a magnetosphere. Salt water is a fine conductor of electricity and just as the moving metal of our world generates a magnetosphere to shield us from the solar wind, so too the salt water of your world's interior.



As regards those deep pools - it is a cold, dry, hardscrabble desert topside. Not so underneath. Fueled by the deep heat of the core, the life of the subsurface water world is rich and varied, and the fishing can be very good once you can get through. But if you hook something that does not put up a fight, cut your line fast and get everyone clear of the edge. Whatever it is might be coming up to have a look.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:29














1












1








1





$begingroup$

Yes. Water for a core, mantle and crust.



cold desert



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert




Polar deserts are a particular class of cold desert. The air is very
cold and carries little moisture so little precipitation occurs and
what does fall, usually snow, is carried along in the often strong
wind and may form blizzards, drifts and dunes similar to those caused
by dust and sand in other desert regions.




Your water world is dry on top because it is cold. Below the packed snow is ice, and more ice, and very eventually you will get down to liquid water. From OP




there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and
reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where
civilizations can spring up....




These hydrothermal springs come up thru cracks in the ice and sometimes can form pools of liquid water - very, very deep pools.



As regards a magnetosphere - I can think of no reason a water world should not have a magnetosphere. Salt water is a fine conductor of electricity and just as the moving metal of our world generates a magnetosphere to shield us from the solar wind, so too the salt water of your world's interior.



As regards those deep pools - it is a cold, dry, hardscrabble desert topside. Not so underneath. Fueled by the deep heat of the core, the life of the subsurface water world is rich and varied, and the fishing can be very good once you can get through. But if you hook something that does not put up a fight, cut your line fast and get everyone clear of the edge. Whatever it is might be coming up to have a look.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



Yes. Water for a core, mantle and crust.



cold desert



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert




Polar deserts are a particular class of cold desert. The air is very
cold and carries little moisture so little precipitation occurs and
what does fall, usually snow, is carried along in the often strong
wind and may form blizzards, drifts and dunes similar to those caused
by dust and sand in other desert regions.




Your water world is dry on top because it is cold. Below the packed snow is ice, and more ice, and very eventually you will get down to liquid water. From OP




there are a few places where this water seeps through the cracks and
reaches the surface, where it creates fertile oases where
civilizations can spring up....




These hydrothermal springs come up thru cracks in the ice and sometimes can form pools of liquid water - very, very deep pools.



As regards a magnetosphere - I can think of no reason a water world should not have a magnetosphere. Salt water is a fine conductor of electricity and just as the moving metal of our world generates a magnetosphere to shield us from the solar wind, so too the salt water of your world's interior.



As regards those deep pools - it is a cold, dry, hardscrabble desert topside. Not so underneath. Fueled by the deep heat of the core, the life of the subsurface water world is rich and varied, and the fishing can be very good once you can get through. But if you hook something that does not put up a fight, cut your line fast and get everyone clear of the edge. Whatever it is might be coming up to have a look.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 21 at 1:39









WillkWillk

105k25198444




105k25198444








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:29














  • 1




    $begingroup$
    We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
    $endgroup$
    – Mark
    Jan 21 at 5:29








1




1




$begingroup$
We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
$endgroup$
– Mark
Jan 21 at 5:29




$begingroup$
We've had a few questions about water worlds on this site (eg. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/54134/…, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/106732/…). Short version: once you get larger than about the size of Mercury, you're going to get an ice core, not a liquid core.
$endgroup$
– Mark
Jan 21 at 5:29











-2












$begingroup$

It would take serious artistic license to exist, but...



I do not believe a planet could naturally evolve into this state. The problem isn't actually pressure. People assume that the further down you go, the more pressure there is. It's true to an extent, but the closer to the center you get the less you experience gravity (zero gravity at the center!). Pressure is something that makes sense when you're talking about the crust or rigid mantle. But if it applied to the liquid core, every crack in the mantle would result in massive eruptions — but they don't.



On the other hand, what you do get is heat. We don't really have proof of what's at the center of our planet, but a century of science has given us some really good guesses. We guess that there's a solid core. It's spinning at a different speed compared to the crust. Everything in the middle is subject to tremendous friction. Result = super heated rock. We think.



From the perspective of "solid stuff slowly combines via gravity over bazillions of years until some fool stamps his feet and says, 'let's call it a planet,'" this model works very well — but it doesn't explain where water comes from and that's actually been something scientists have pondered for a long time.



So, let's pretend that your world started as a honking lot of water orbiting a newly forming star and it starts to gather via gravity...



Why not? It's your world. From this perspective your world has a very, very low average density. There may still be a solid core of stuff (almost everything sinks through water, which is a better than average argument against this, unless there's a honking lot of water) but the middle isn't molten rock, it's super heated water.



And when the crust breaks, what you get is steam.



The crust is similar to a Roman arch — it's all spun out such that the bedrock is very, very flat and uniform. There would be no mountains — no plate tectonics to speak of — hot water, unlike magma, doesn't have the mass to push the surface around, which means earthquakes are caused by the heating/cooling cycle of the sun and occur most often at what we would call the tropics of cancer and capricorn (latitudes of highest thermal gradient between the poles and the equator).



This has the potential of meaning a lot of aquifers, but I'm having trouble keeping the land a desert. Water + sunlight = life. It would have to be a closer-to-the-sun planet such that the heat would burn off the water and the life. The consequence (thanks to the humidity) would be a lot of clouds, storms, and the night-side would get cold.



At least that's what I think.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:11






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:25








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
    $endgroup$
    – Geoffrey Brent
    Jan 21 at 3:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:04


















-2












$begingroup$

It would take serious artistic license to exist, but...



I do not believe a planet could naturally evolve into this state. The problem isn't actually pressure. People assume that the further down you go, the more pressure there is. It's true to an extent, but the closer to the center you get the less you experience gravity (zero gravity at the center!). Pressure is something that makes sense when you're talking about the crust or rigid mantle. But if it applied to the liquid core, every crack in the mantle would result in massive eruptions — but they don't.



On the other hand, what you do get is heat. We don't really have proof of what's at the center of our planet, but a century of science has given us some really good guesses. We guess that there's a solid core. It's spinning at a different speed compared to the crust. Everything in the middle is subject to tremendous friction. Result = super heated rock. We think.



From the perspective of "solid stuff slowly combines via gravity over bazillions of years until some fool stamps his feet and says, 'let's call it a planet,'" this model works very well — but it doesn't explain where water comes from and that's actually been something scientists have pondered for a long time.



So, let's pretend that your world started as a honking lot of water orbiting a newly forming star and it starts to gather via gravity...



Why not? It's your world. From this perspective your world has a very, very low average density. There may still be a solid core of stuff (almost everything sinks through water, which is a better than average argument against this, unless there's a honking lot of water) but the middle isn't molten rock, it's super heated water.



And when the crust breaks, what you get is steam.



The crust is similar to a Roman arch — it's all spun out such that the bedrock is very, very flat and uniform. There would be no mountains — no plate tectonics to speak of — hot water, unlike magma, doesn't have the mass to push the surface around, which means earthquakes are caused by the heating/cooling cycle of the sun and occur most often at what we would call the tropics of cancer and capricorn (latitudes of highest thermal gradient between the poles and the equator).



This has the potential of meaning a lot of aquifers, but I'm having trouble keeping the land a desert. Water + sunlight = life. It would have to be a closer-to-the-sun planet such that the heat would burn off the water and the life. The consequence (thanks to the humidity) would be a lot of clouds, storms, and the night-side would get cold.



At least that's what I think.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:11






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:25








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
    $endgroup$
    – Geoffrey Brent
    Jan 21 at 3:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:04
















-2












-2








-2





$begingroup$

It would take serious artistic license to exist, but...



I do not believe a planet could naturally evolve into this state. The problem isn't actually pressure. People assume that the further down you go, the more pressure there is. It's true to an extent, but the closer to the center you get the less you experience gravity (zero gravity at the center!). Pressure is something that makes sense when you're talking about the crust or rigid mantle. But if it applied to the liquid core, every crack in the mantle would result in massive eruptions — but they don't.



On the other hand, what you do get is heat. We don't really have proof of what's at the center of our planet, but a century of science has given us some really good guesses. We guess that there's a solid core. It's spinning at a different speed compared to the crust. Everything in the middle is subject to tremendous friction. Result = super heated rock. We think.



From the perspective of "solid stuff slowly combines via gravity over bazillions of years until some fool stamps his feet and says, 'let's call it a planet,'" this model works very well — but it doesn't explain where water comes from and that's actually been something scientists have pondered for a long time.



So, let's pretend that your world started as a honking lot of water orbiting a newly forming star and it starts to gather via gravity...



Why not? It's your world. From this perspective your world has a very, very low average density. There may still be a solid core of stuff (almost everything sinks through water, which is a better than average argument against this, unless there's a honking lot of water) but the middle isn't molten rock, it's super heated water.



And when the crust breaks, what you get is steam.



The crust is similar to a Roman arch — it's all spun out such that the bedrock is very, very flat and uniform. There would be no mountains — no plate tectonics to speak of — hot water, unlike magma, doesn't have the mass to push the surface around, which means earthquakes are caused by the heating/cooling cycle of the sun and occur most often at what we would call the tropics of cancer and capricorn (latitudes of highest thermal gradient between the poles and the equator).



This has the potential of meaning a lot of aquifers, but I'm having trouble keeping the land a desert. Water + sunlight = life. It would have to be a closer-to-the-sun planet such that the heat would burn off the water and the life. The consequence (thanks to the humidity) would be a lot of clouds, storms, and the night-side would get cold.



At least that's what I think.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



It would take serious artistic license to exist, but...



I do not believe a planet could naturally evolve into this state. The problem isn't actually pressure. People assume that the further down you go, the more pressure there is. It's true to an extent, but the closer to the center you get the less you experience gravity (zero gravity at the center!). Pressure is something that makes sense when you're talking about the crust or rigid mantle. But if it applied to the liquid core, every crack in the mantle would result in massive eruptions — but they don't.



On the other hand, what you do get is heat. We don't really have proof of what's at the center of our planet, but a century of science has given us some really good guesses. We guess that there's a solid core. It's spinning at a different speed compared to the crust. Everything in the middle is subject to tremendous friction. Result = super heated rock. We think.



From the perspective of "solid stuff slowly combines via gravity over bazillions of years until some fool stamps his feet and says, 'let's call it a planet,'" this model works very well — but it doesn't explain where water comes from and that's actually been something scientists have pondered for a long time.



So, let's pretend that your world started as a honking lot of water orbiting a newly forming star and it starts to gather via gravity...



Why not? It's your world. From this perspective your world has a very, very low average density. There may still be a solid core of stuff (almost everything sinks through water, which is a better than average argument against this, unless there's a honking lot of water) but the middle isn't molten rock, it's super heated water.



And when the crust breaks, what you get is steam.



The crust is similar to a Roman arch — it's all spun out such that the bedrock is very, very flat and uniform. There would be no mountains — no plate tectonics to speak of — hot water, unlike magma, doesn't have the mass to push the surface around, which means earthquakes are caused by the heating/cooling cycle of the sun and occur most often at what we would call the tropics of cancer and capricorn (latitudes of highest thermal gradient between the poles and the equator).



This has the potential of meaning a lot of aquifers, but I'm having trouble keeping the land a desert. Water + sunlight = life. It would have to be a closer-to-the-sun planet such that the heat would burn off the water and the life. The consequence (thanks to the humidity) would be a lot of clouds, storms, and the night-side would get cold.



At least that's what I think.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 21 at 1:02









JBHJBH

42.9k592205




42.9k592205








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:11






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:25








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
    $endgroup$
    – Geoffrey Brent
    Jan 21 at 3:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:04
















  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:11






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:25








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 2:31






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
    $endgroup$
    – Geoffrey Brent
    Jan 21 at 3:04






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
    $endgroup$
    – Arkenstein XII
    Jan 21 at 3:04










1




1




$begingroup$
Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 2:11




$begingroup$
Sorry, mate... this is not a very good answer. The interior of the Earth is under immense pressure. Whether or not one "experiences gravity" is utterly meaningless to the question of pressure. Pressure is the result of the weight of thousands of kilometres of rock bearing down from above. At the boundary between the outer and inner cores, pressure is roughly 360 gigapascals. Furthermore, friction is not the cause of internal heating. At all. Rather, it is the result of the radioactive decay of heavy elements in the core.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 2:11




2




2




$begingroup$
The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 2:25






$begingroup$
The only point in the Earth that experiences zero gravity is the centre of gravity. Everywhere else, gravity is being exerted. As to where I got that figure, we should start with the fact that I am a qualified geoscientist. If that is insufficient, I will point out that Wikipedia agrees with me, and cites the following: David. R. Lide, ed. (2006–2007). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (87th ed.). pp. j14–13
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 2:25






1




1




$begingroup$
A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 2:31




$begingroup$
A link to a Physics.SE question that covers this: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/184032/…
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 2:31




2




2




$begingroup$
Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
$endgroup$
– Geoffrey Brent
Jan 21 at 3:04




$begingroup$
Engineering PhD here. Arkenstein is correct. If the pressure at the core was lower than the pressure in upper layers, then that would create a net downward force which would compress the core until it had at least as much pressure as the upper layers. Roughly speaking, gravity tells you how fast pressure is increasing with depth - so as you approach the centre, pressure will plateau, but not drop.
$endgroup$
– Geoffrey Brent
Jan 21 at 3:04




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You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
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– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 3:04






$begingroup$
You are failing to grasp the physics of the matter. While at the centre of mass, the net gravity experienced is zero, that does not nullify the fact that the 6370km of rock and metal on all sides is absolutely experiencing gravity and is therefore exerting pressure in the direction of that centre of mass. Further links for your perusal: hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/PavelKhazron.shtml researchgate.net/figure/…
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– Arkenstein XII
Jan 21 at 3:04




















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