Rahvin I'd love to see your "special" calculation which make you so much better than the people you are arguing against.
Alrighty, here you go. Remember that the scenario proposed was that 1/3 of the water contained in the oceans and icecaps fell as rain, and the rest of the water poured out of the "fountains" like an everyday spring. He also proposed that the water thrown up as rain would first reach an alititude sufficient to bleed off heat into space, lowering the temperature of the planet and setting up for the Ice Age, and then fall down over 40 days.
Okay, let's see how much energy we are talking about with 30% of the world's ocean mass falling as rain. We'll ignore the icecaps, becuase I don't feel like doing THAT much math, and it only makes it worse for you if I do.
According to a previous post, the Earth's oceans contain 1,370,000,000 cubic kilometers of water. That's 1.37e18 cubic meters, so 1.37e18 metric tons. 1/3 of that would be 4.57e17 tons. 4.57e20 kilograms. We already know that rain falls at about 7 m/s. Kinetic energy = (mv^2)/2. That's 2.24e22 Joules of energy, which translates to 5,358,851.67 megatons of energy. That's about 10 kilotons of energy per square kilometer of the planet. Each day, it would be the equivalent of 10 metric tons of TNT exploding over every square kilometer on the planet. Not nearly as impressive or devastating as the previous calculations, but still more than enough to cause changes in the Earth we would still detect a few thousand years later. Not to mention that a wooden boat wouldn't be much protection.
AND we still need explosions several orders of magnitude stronger just to get the water up there, from the "fountains of the deep." 18,000 mph is about 29,000 kph. That's 1.04e11 m/s. The kinetic energy required to make 1/3 of the Earth's oceans reach escape velocity is 2.47e42 Joules, which converts to 5.91e26 megatons, and this one isn't spread over 40 days. It also doesnt take into account the drag force of pushing through several cubic kilometers of ocean, about 62 kilometers of air (if I recall correctly), and STILL retaining a speed of nearly 29,000 kph. These calculations assume that air resistance is not a problem, and that the water is ejected from the surface of the earth, not the ocean's depths, so it's a pretty good lower limit, I think.
It would only take 5.26e8 megatons to melt the entire surface of the Earth into magma to a depth of one meter. This calculation assumes that the entire planet is made up of silicate material (ie, rock), with no oceans. The enrgy required to put 1/3 of the Earths ocean into the upper atmosphere would be enough to melt the surface of the earth to a depth of 1.13e18 meters.
That's my cleaned-up final post in the other forum. Well, the math part anyway.
You'll notice that I handwaved away large portions of the energy involved by only using the terminal velocity of raindrops and the mass of the water. Energy released during the fall itself is not added to my totals, only the impact. I wanted to give as many concessions as humanly possible to the Creationist so that he could see how bad his scenario really was.
For the "Fountains of the Deep" calculations, which is where we actually destroy the planet (since his Flood used a tiny fraction of the water that would really have been necessary), I handwaved various issues that I don't know how to calculate that only add MORE energy to the equations. Again, trying to set lower limits and give as many concessions as possible. Oh, and thanks to Mike for the BDZ calculations.
Please, if anyone wants to double-check my math, feel free to do so. I've been out of physics class for a while, and I might be a tad rusty. Besides, some of you have a lot more experience calculating global devastation than I do.
Enough to heat the water up to 75 deg F hardly boiling....Just because you can show calulation with really big numbers like 10^25 doesn't mean you can incinerate the Earth.[/quote[
You're an idiot. We aren't talking about one pound. We aren't talking about boiling the water. We're talking about a few bazillion megatons of energy being converted to heat on impact.