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Originally Posted by AlexanderHowl
Tide locked worlds are probably unlikely to be habitable by humans outside of the thin twilight zone
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Really? I just finished explaining why that belief is outdated.
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Now, cooler worlds with tidelocking could potentially allow for more habitable area, but the nightside would be absolutely frozen in the case. With an average atmosphere, the dayside is +20% while the nightside is -20%,
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Not according to the scientific papers I cited in the OP.
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meaning that a 240K world
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Earth's average surface temperature is about 288 K.
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would be 288K on dayside and 192K nightside.
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Merlis & Schneider (op. cit.) used a global circulation model and found that a synchronously rotating Earth would have a temperature a little over 300 K in the middle of the daylit side and about 250 K over a huge stretch of the dark side.
And I told you about that in the message you are replying to.
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One problem though is that carbon dioxide snows at the nigh side temperature, so the biosphere would collapse, as there would be no carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to allow for photosynthesis.
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Dude! Did you even read my post?
The belief that CO₂ will snow out on the dark side was debunked by
Joshi et al in
1997. I explained that
and both cited and linked my source in the very post that you are replying to.