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# also to answer to your question I need to clarify some things
Does the rotation of the planet move the water? Are there tidal forces at play? If so, how many moons does this planet have and what gravitational pull do they have on the water?
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 2:52, archived)
# None of those things happen and there aren't even any stars in the universe.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 2:53, archived)
# well if the water remains perfectly still and there is no way for the water to heat up or cool down then I guess it would remain in a constant state
Was the water all at an even temperature when the ocean was formed? Is the ocean completely still?
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 2:57, archived)
# Yes, and yes.
What I reckon happens is that first the pressure means it heats up a little bit at the bottom, and that warm water stays down there because it's being compressed, and the heat evens out after a bit, and there you are, it's just a lot of water and it's slightly warmer all through than when I put it there.

Which means our ocean is only cold at the bottom because things make it hot in places and that water rises.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:02, archived)
# Our ocean isn't uniformly cold at the bottom though
I mean there are all sorts of volcanic activities going on down there.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:06, archived)
# I heard that there's snakes.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:09, archived)
# See, the earth gets hotter as you go deeper
and the atmosphere gets colder as you go higher, but the ocean is the other way up, and that bothered me. Actually there's probably some bit of the upper atmosphere that's really hot, it's called the hotosphere, birds don't go there, they don't even know about it.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:10, archived)
# But the bottom of the ocean is still the top of the crust, which is the coldest part of the earth.
The crust is really very thin, like the skin on milk or the rind of an apple.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:12, archived)
# No, wait. I don't mean that the crust is thin, I mean that our bit (ocean, houses, etc) is thin.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:13, archived)
# The ocean is still the wrong way up
I'm not going to overlook this aberration just because it's thin.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:16, archived)
# I made some LEGO models based on an inversion of that.
For a planet where the bottom layer of water is way hotter than the air or surface water.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:31, archived)
# Please tell me you made it out of pirate lego
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:48, archived)
# Several parts from that theme, yes.
Here the gallery.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:55, archived)
# Warm. Water. Rises.
Density Holmes.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:52, archived)
# Also I doubt something's own pressure could heat itself up. The energy would have to come from somewhere.
Thermodynamics.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:54, archived)
# Do you mean like how the core of the Earth is so hot because of all the pressure?
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:57, archived)
# is not the earth made from a ball of hot magma that is cooling slowly?
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 9:26, archived)
# people stopped answering this at 4am ish then :/
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 9:34, archived)
# Big ball of transuranics mixed with your iron nickel core for extra heat?
Run out eventually, but it could still be billions of years for it to do so.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:58, archived)
# What about evaporation? Does it rain on this planet or does the ocean just sit there?
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 2:59, archived)
# FUCKING BIRDS
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:00, archived)
# One day the birds will all flap their wings at the same time, and the downdraft will blow off all our hats and wigs.
THEN we'll be sorry, oh yes.
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:15, archived)
# without any stars
i.e. a sun or a molten core the water should really be super cooled ice
edit : unless the atmosphere is on fire
(, Wed 3 Feb 2010, 9:29, archived)