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Earth- The second Venus?


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I thought of this over night, to get my mind off of several things. But it seemed pretty interesting.

 

We believe Venus was turned into the way it is in one of two ways:

 

1) The Electro Magnetic field Venus had weakened and the sun completly attacked the planet, causing everything to become basicly lava and incernerated land.

 

2) The planet became so hot that the water boiled, and turned to lava, consuming the land and turning into the planet it is now.

 

 

Venus was apperantly like our planet, until whatever happened to it happened. The north and south poles on Venus were found on traces of being in COMPLETLY different positions, which may have been the cause of an electric field collapsing. They shifted to strengthen the field, but the planet stayed the same.

 

But if Venus was like Earth, then what happened there is possible here on Earth.

 

 

Our electromagnetic field is weak right now, and is only getitng weaker. The sun is also on a spree of blasting Earth with rays of solar fire, which happens every day, but it is stronger this year than it has ever been before. Our poles are also shifting, which may cause the water to move further inland, so if it turns to Lava, then basicly, Earth WOULD end up like Venus.

 

 

 

So, what do you think of this?

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Its because itss closer to the Sun then earth is, and all that water dried up or left the planet as they mentioned in a certain documentary for some odd reason...

 

Here you are found it

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ehgs3qazcvw

 

Not to mention the most up to date one I've seen yet.:thumbsup:

Edited by Thor.
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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

Um, no.

 

One degree closer to the sun, our oceans would boil. One degree back, they would freeze. Distance does matter. In fact, it matters a great deal. There's a region called the Goldie Lox zone where planets meet the right conditions to support life with a sufficient source of water. However, Mars and Venus were thought to have water because the conditions on those planets don't meet the conditions of our own. A variety of conditions determine a planet's ability to support life, one of those being gases. Venus, unfortunately, is so close to the sun, and contains such a noxious array of deadly gases, that it formed a greenhouse effect and thus, the oceans boiled away. Mars was fine on its own with its atmosphere protecting its oceans from freezing until it somehow lost it to reasons largely unknown. And btw, planetary magnetic fields do not weaken on their own, and solar flares from a low-mass star, no matter how progressively deadly (which occurs in a power-up power-down sequence of roughly every 12 years), will not weaken that said magnetic field because it remains relatively the same and stable as that star ages. The only way to weaken a magnetic field, and then cause it to collapse, not including pole shifts (which won't cause a collapse), is to have either a gamma ray burst strike the planet, or until the core finally cools.

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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

Oh god...ignore the other....10 posts. God damn this computer. :facepalm:

Edited by Keanumoreira
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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

Sorry. :facepalm:

Edited by Keanumoreira
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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

Sorry. :wallbash:

Edited by Keanumoreira
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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

Sorry. :unsure:

Edited by Keanumoreira
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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

Sorry. :psyduck:

Edited by Keanumoreira
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The distance from a planet to the sun can't affect very much.

 

There's still another planet closer, and it maintains itself.

 

Earth could still be hit like Venus, no matter what the distance from the sun.

 

I'm really sorry. :ohdear:

Edited by Keanumoreira
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