Posted on Aug 28, 2014
Cpl Michael Strickler
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So off the winds of a short story competition I am starting another short story (fingers crossed no writers block)

One of the details I have not worked out is for the planet it takes place on. I wanted a world where the 'land' is ice (ie frozen water) and the oceans were some other liquid that boils lower than 0 degrees Celsius.

Whatever this element or compound is I would like to be above -183 degrees (as i believe that is the boiling point of oxygen, i still want the humans there to be able to breathe haha)

i would also like this liquid to be toxic to humans (if they fall in the ocean or a mist of it rolls by they have to put on masks), but there are low enough amounts of it in the air that normally a mask is not needed for a ig unit.

im not too good with the chemistry so I appreciate any help from those that might be! i have looked up carbon dioxide and i think that that works. the oceans can be -57°C or higher so they boil. I cannot find any information about when CO2 becomes a gas believe it or not, so I am not sure what the air temp should be. does that sound like a workable "environment?"

thanks in advance for any help
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
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Methane is a solid choice; it is both common (this situation actually exists on Titan, and postulated elsewhere) and fits your description.
It liquefies (assuming one atmosphere of pressure at a little cooler than you want (-164C) and freezes at -182C.
If you temperature range is fixed, a higher atmospheric pressure would raise the temperature to boil off the methane ocean.
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Cpl Michael Strickler
Cpl Michael Strickler
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Awesome. That is why we keep the Army around there First Sergeant!
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Dear Cpl Michael Strickler,

Carbon dioxide has no liquid state at pressures below 5.1 standard atmospheres (520 kPa). At 1 atmosphere (near mean sea level pressure), the gas deposits directly to a solid at temperatures below -78.5 °C ; -109.3 °F) and the solid sublimes directly to a gas above -78.5 °C. In its solid state, carbon dioxide is commonly called dry ice. Liquid carbon dioxide forms only at pressures above 5.1 atm; the triple point of carbon dioxide is about 518 kPa at -56.6 °C (see phase diagram). The critical point is 7.38 MPa at 31.1 °C. At temperatures and pressures above the critical point, carbon dioxide behaves as a supercritical fluid known as supercritical carbon dioxide.

Maybe liquid Ammonia? ( Melts @ -77.73 °C (-107.91 °F) Boils @ -33.34 °C (-28.01 °F)

Warmest Regards, Sandy

Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dioxide
Cpl Michael Strickler
Cpl Michael Strickler
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i wonder why i never found that on google?!

for ammonia it would be over freezing for the water though... any other ideas?
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Cpl Michael Strickler.

My apologies . . . RP hid the minus signs copied over from WikiPedia . . . I put them back now . . . so set your ambient temperature to something in the range of -107 deg F to -29 deg F . . . the water ice land works . . . the liquid ammonia ocean works . . . and the air doesn't liquify or freeze.

Warmest Regards, Sandy
Cpl Michael Strickler
Cpl Michael Strickler
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thanks alot... trying to keep this stuff believeable!!

Oh yeah, and i did see that page yesterday while searching, but i must have glazed over that part... Google is still a good search engine haha
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