SWM wrote:Now let's discuss getting oxygen from comets.
Taking Halley's comet as typical, we can expect over 35% by mass will be oxygen. The density of a comet is around 0.6 g/cc. We will assume, for argument's sake, that sufficient nitrogen or other innocuous gasses will be available from some source; the ratio of nitrogen to oxygen in a comet is far lower than the ratio in the Earth's atmosphere.
Namelessfly suggested using comets around 15 km in diameter. Such a comet would have a mass of 1e12 kg, of which 3.7e11 kg will be oxygen. To get sufficient oxygen for the new atmosphere, you will need more than 3,000,000 comets! [edit]Sorry, miscalculated. The comet would be 1e15 kg, and you would need 3000 comets[/edit] And, of course, you will actually have to process all those comets, because the oxygen will be in the form of H2O and CO.
Oh, Bother.
Diameter of a planet is on the order of 10,000 Km, right?
This is 1eex7 meters, correct?
Surface area is then on the order of 3eex14 square meters.
At ten tons of atmosphere per square meter that is 1eex4Kg/m^2 x 3eex14 square meters = 3eex18 Kg of atmosphere.
Now assume our comet is on the order of ten km in diameter.
That is 10,000 or 1eex4 meters, right?
Volume is then on the order of 1eex12 cubic meters.
I got lazy by using an assumed cometary density of 1 rather than .6 but that is 600kg per cubic meter so our comet yields 6eex14 Kg.
OMG, I did make a math boo boo.
We need about 500 comets to make an atmosphere!
I will drink two six packs and call YOU in the morning.
We will actually need more because a lot of that comet is methane which will become CO2.