Would the atmosphere cease to exist?

  • ShaunaTheDead@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    True, though you could have been less rude about it. I had forgotten about the condensation point. It’s pretty similar though and doesn’t change anything about my answer. Condensation of Oxygen is -183°C, Nitrogen -196°C. It’s hard to find condensation data on “air” because there’s a similar term called the “dew point” at which humidity starts condensating out of the air, but it’s probably around -190°C.

    Again, there’s basically nowhere in the known universe that’s that cold, especially on a planetary body with an atmosphere, except for here on Earth in a lab.

    • Madison_rogue@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Recorded temperatures at the poles of Titan indicate it’s just cold enough for oxygen to condense (-183.1 Deg. C). Unfortunately, even though cold enough, there isn’t any free oxygen detected in the atmosphere of the moon. Although it does rain methane, it’s predicted there are cryo-volcanoes, and water is as hard as stone. There are really interesting atmospheric phenomena occurring on the moon.