
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)
Which means our ocean is only cold at the bottom because things make it hot in places and that water rises.

I mean there are all sorts of volcanic activities going on down there.
( ,
Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:06,
archived)

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)

The crust is really very thin, like the skin on milk or the rind of an apple.
( ,
Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:12,
archived)


I'm not going to overlook this aberration just because it's thin.
( ,
Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:16,
archived)

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)

Thermodynamics.
( ,
Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:54,
archived)

( ,
Wed 3 Feb 2010, 3:57,
archived)