07-02-2016, 11:07 AM
I'm disappointed a gas giant planet wouldn't really float in a big enough ocean. But an icy planet might, or a small rocky planet with enough caverns in it. But how big could they be?
Largest possible rocky planet
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07-02-2016, 11:07 AM
I'm disappointed a gas giant planet wouldn't really float in a big enough ocean. But an icy planet might, or a small rocky planet with enough caverns in it. But how big could they be?
07-03-2016, 07:03 AM
The deepest ocean would be a globe of pure water; we have one of those in the scenario. Tangaroa is a ball of pure water, about the biggest you can get without having high-pressure ice at the centre.
You could, I suppose, float a ball of low-pressure ice in such an ocean, but the mere presence of so much ice in that sphere of water would change the characteristics of the world - the low pressure ice would float on the surface of the water, and the increased mass would cause high-pressure ice to form at the core- so you'd end up with a triple-layer world; an icy outer layer, a water ocean and ice again at the core.
07-04-2016, 10:26 AM
A possibility that may result from the destruction of the stellar primaries is that any planets formed pre-supernova might have been blasted into bits by the cataclysm(s), and then recycled into new worlds afterwards. A rocky planet with a radius 1.6x Earth or smaller can avoid collecting a hydrogen-helium atmosphere, while maintaining a "reasonably" Earth-like surface gravity.
Radtech497
"I'd much rather see you on my side, than scattered into... atoms." Ming the Merciless, Ruler of the Universe
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