Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Is it feasible to ignite Jupiter on the wandering earth in reality? Why?

Is it feasible to ignite Jupiter on the wandering earth in reality? Why?

There is a lot of oxygen in the earth's atmosphere. After extracting a large amount of oxygen from the earth, mixing with a large amount of hydrogen in Jupiter's atmosphere may catch fire. Jupiter is a gaseous planet, and the hydrogen content in the atmosphere is as high as 90%. ), of course, is to guide the explosion of the space station in the setting, but in fact, the large space station is faster than the small spacecraft, and there is no need to sacrifice the space station! Of course, we don't need to be too serious, because this is a movie after all. But it is possible to ignite Jupiter's atmosphere. Whether the shock wave can free the earth from the Lokh limit is unknown at present. Because in theory, this explosion will not spread to the surface of the earth. Because the atmosphere next to the earth does not contain hydrogen!

Hydrogen combustion requires oxygen, and the hydrogen concentration required for explosion is 4% to 70%, but the oxygen content in Jupiter's atmosphere is very low! The combustion process cannot be supported. Don't think that it is not enough to ignite Mars in Jupiter's atmosphere. In fact, Jupiter has a high probability of being struck by lightning! This is also lightning in Jupiter's atmosphere, which happens every day, but it has never been ignited, because there is no burning agent that can react with hydrogen! Another kind of ignition is nuclear fusion, but Jupiter is not massive enough. Even if nuclear fusion occurs locally, Jupiter can't ignite without a chain reaction. Unless you give Jupiter another 80 masses, the total mass of all planets and asteroids in the solar system is less than half that of Jupiter, so Jupiter has no chance!

Jupiter, like the sun, is composed of hydrogen and helium, but they are completely different. For example, the mass of the sun is about 1000 times that of Jupiter. Although hydrogen and helium are light, they have mass and produce air pressure. The ultra-high mass of the sun causes countless hydrogen atoms to collide under ultra-high pressure, resulting in nuclear fusion reaction and the formation of countless helium atoms. Of course, this process will release a lot of energy and heat, and the sun can continue to release heat. This process does not require oxygen.

If we return to reality, we can observe that there are obvious stripes and stripes on the surface of Jupiter. In fact, it is a wooden nebula with different temperatures, and the ups and downs of clouds with different temperatures will lead to strong atmospheric storms. The most striking thing is Jupiter's "red spot". It is big enough to hold the whole earth. The violent weather above keeps thunder and lightning, but lightning with such high energy can't ignite Jupiter. With this tiny technology, it's no big deal to throw tens of thousands of nuclear bombs at Jupiter. Therefore, the possibility that the earth people want to ignite Jupiter is zero and does not exist at all. So it's only fiction that the wandering earth lights up Jupiter's bridge.