On Tue, 01 Dec 2009 16:46:49 +0100, Martin Tomasek said: > Humans can change climate globally, but there is just one way available > to human now: to blow up the oceans. If you use nuke in the ocean and > the nuke is big enough, you can dissociate the water the way > dissociation will keep spreading through all the water it has direct > contact to. But I'm quite sure after this event there will be noone to > confirm the climate change.
Are you thinking of Vonnegut's fictional ice-9 here? None of the 15 known phases of water ice actually behave that way. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice So yes, you could convert the entire Pacific to one of those phases - but only after applying enough nukes to compress each part of the Pacific to the millions of PSI needed. And as the US found during their nuke tests at Bikini, trying to do so usually results in most of the water going straight up, never achieving the compression needed in any ice that isn't subsequently vabporized. If you have a pointer to serious research that indicates any phases of ice act that way, I'd be interested.
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