Effects of higher gravity

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Torco
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by Torco »

Chuma wrote:Just to be annoying, let me also point out that there is no particular reason why animals should evolve to have legs. The could just as well have, say, wheels, or they could be stationary, or they could all swim or fly, or they could be composed of massless particles...
Swim or fly okay, reasonably likely locomotion methods. Wheels, OTOH, look unlikely, and massless particles is too exotic to contemplate, or at least contemplate beyond wild guesses

Also, for higher gravities, I imagine being snakey would work great

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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by su_liam »

finlay wrote:multiplication character is × by the way.
A-tilde or square root of eth?

I assume you're talking about my page. It looks fine to me in UTF-8. As does your multiplication sign, above. I was just messin' witcha.
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by su_liam »

Torco wrote:Also, for higher gravities, I imagine being snakey would work great
Or snail-like. Though I still think, unless the gravity was just bodaciously excessive, some critters would evolve some faster form of locomotion.
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by finlay »

su_liam wrote:
finlay wrote:multiplication character is × by the way.
A-tilde or square root of eth?

I assume you're talking about my page. It looks fine to me in UTF-8. As does your multiplication sign, above. I was just messin' witcha.
The first ones look like massive gigantic X things to me rather than multiplication signs. Maybe it's the font. Later in your blog post it looks right though.

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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by su_liam »

Word Press is generally easy and looks good, but every so often it does weird things you can't fix without a PhD in Scary Mindbendy Computer-science.

Maybe I should go back to using Mathematica and posting everything as PDFs...
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by Dothraki_physicist »

Moving out of biological questions now and into the geophysical realm.

I read somewhere that because of earth's gravity, mountains here can never be more than 9 miles high. Does this mean that in 1.5 gees, they can't be higher than 6 miles? I just figured something like that would have a straightforward proportionality.
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by su_liam »

Let's see. The heat output of radioactive materials should be, assuming the planet has an earthlike composition, proportional to volume(treat that as g^3). The surface area through which that heat must pass is proportional g^2. So the heat throughput per unit area would be proportional to g^(3/2). This is the energy driving mountain-building.

Erosion rates should be proportional to boundary shear stress.

tau-0=rho*g*R*s, where rho is the density of water(essentially a constant), g is gravity, R is the hydraulic radius(lets ignore that for now, I can't see why it would vary with gravity), and s is the slope over which the water is falling.

Thus, erosion is proportional to gravity.

Given all that, mountain heights should be an equilibrium between driving energy and erosion. So I figure mountain height would vary roughly as the square root of gravity.

1.25g -> mountains 1.12 times as high.
1.50g -> mountains 1.22 times as high.

Hmm... Not the result I was expecting.
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by bulbaquil »

If it helps, assuming no difference in density, gravity will be proportional to the radius:

V = 4/3 * pi * r^3 for a sphere
F = G * m1 * m2 / r^2; dividing by m2 (which we assume to be 1 kg) to get g, we have

g = G * M / r^2 (M=mass of the planet). Letting M = rho * V = rho * 4/3 * pi * r^3, we get
g = G * 4/3 * pi * rho * r

Units check: < N*m^2/kg^2)*(kg/m^3)*(m) = N/kg = m/s^2 > which checks out,

I guess that makes sense then that you could treat surface area as proportional to g^2, then, if the density of your planet's fixed.
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Re: Effects of higher gravity

Post by su_liam »

Yeah, I'm assuming constant density, which is not altogether reasonable given my assumption of similar composition and taking compression effects into account. I'll stick to the constant density assumption unless someone can give me a reasonable formula for compression effects on planetary density.

Did I miss a non-linearity in the relationship between energy and height?

Energy required to lift a mass against gravity:
W=E=fD ... force is weight: w=mg
W=mgD ... I'll assume the mass moved doesn't vary with gravity, so we can neglect that part
W:=gD ... so

h=D:=W/g

From before
W:=g^(3/2) ... so
h:=g^(1/2)

I'm clearly where I started.

I was expecting something like h:=g^-(1/2) as opposed to h:=g^-1, what I got was...
Yuck.
I obviously have something seriously wrong here, but I'm too effing stupid to figure it out.
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