It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: ManFromEurope
100 Miliwatt/m²... That is about 1/10.000 of the solar energy on a sunny day here in northern Germany..
That doesn't seem much. But hey, at least its not man-made, right?
The cause of the variable distribution of heat beneath the glacier is thought to be the movement of magma and associated volcanic activity arising from the rifting of the Earth's crust beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.
originally posted by: generik
originally posted by: ManFromEurope
100 Miliwatt/m²... That is about 1/10.000 of the solar energy on a sunny day here in northern Germany..
That doesn't seem much. But hey, at least its not man-made, right?
yes but ground heat has a bigger difference on ground melt than air temperature. just like those in ground heaters they use for driveways to keep snow and ice clear, they don't use much power or produce much heat but they melt the snow and ice, even in very cold temperatures. even when a snowfall is not completely melted as it falls, it does not last long. and when you feel the ground where it is in use it is still cool and not even warm to the touch, yet it might be below -30C outside.
originally posted by: Shiloh7
a reply to: ManFromEurope
I wonder how many invisible or under water or ice vulcanoes we do have actively heating us up bit by bit.
originally posted by: ManFromEurope
originally posted by: generik
originally posted by: ManFromEurope
100 Miliwatt/m²... That is about 1/10.000 of the solar energy on a sunny day here in northern Germany..
That doesn't seem much. But hey, at least its not man-made, right?
yes but ground heat has a bigger difference on ground melt than air temperature. just like those in ground heaters they use for driveways to keep snow and ice clear, they don't use much power or produce much heat but they melt the snow and ice, even in very cold temperatures. even when a snowfall is not completely melted as it falls, it does not last long. and when you feel the ground where it is in use it is still cool and not even warm to the touch, yet it might be below -30C outside.
That might be the case. But here we are not talking about a driveway. We are talking about heating a glacier. On the one hand, ice is a bad heat-conductor, so even this small amount of warmth will get stored up under the ice. On the other hand, ice is a bad heat-conductor, so after melting some centimeters of ice, there should be an equilibrium between incoming thermal energy from the ground and outgoing thermal energy by flowing water and slow conduction over a greater surface along the whole of the glacier.
tl;dr: 100mW/m² seem to me not enough to produce enough heat to melt enough water to let it slip into the ocean.