The earth's mantle is like a PP&J because of the core is colder. It is like the core is the peanut butter and the earth is jelly.
The earth's mantle is like a PP&J because of the core is colder. It is like the core is the peanut butter and the earth is jelly.
The earth's mantle is like a PP&J because of the core is colder. It is like the core is the peanut butter and the earth is jelly.
In the mantle,we have two layers of solid rock with heated flowing rock between them.
well, earth is like a grilled cheese sandwich because, the bread represents the crust of the earth, and the cheese inside the bread represents the mantle, outer core, and inner core.
peanut butter jelly time!
naw, duh. what did ya think came from? peanuts? pish posh....... -_-
The region below the Earth's crust is called the mantle. It is composed of solid rock that is more rigid than the crust but less dense than the core. The mantle plays a key role in the movements of tectonic plates and the heat flow of the Earth.
Absolutely. Any matter right in carbon can be converted to diamonds with sufficient heat, pressure and time. This implies, using the high-pressure high temperature method -- in excess of 1500C and pressure in excess of 45000bars or 2700F (about the temperature at which steel melts) or 30,000 tons per square inch -- is what's required. These conditions -- at a minimum -- sustained over several million years, is the trick Mother Nature uses to make diamonds.
The earth's population is bigger.
It might be possible to change peanut butter into diamond, but it would probably have to be done in a lab. Diamond, an allotrope of carbon, is formed in an environment of heat and great pressure. We can make diamonds by the compression of carbon around a diamond "seed" in a huge press that is heated. But heating peanut butter to "reduce" it to carbon would probably result in it burning (if it was done in air), or pyrolizing (if it was done away from air). The first would allow the carbon to "get away" and the latter would see it form compounds that would "resist" allowing the carbon to form diamond crystals. If we treated the peanut butter chemically to isolate the carbon, we could use that to create a diamond in the press we mentioned before. This question might be designed to cause a student to think about peanut butter, specifically about the chemistry of this substance. There is a fair amount of carbon in peanut butter, but it is chemically chained up with other elements to make up organic molecules. Heating and compressing peanut butter without isolating the carbon would probably just make a mess in the press. But the carbon in peanut butter is the same as the carbon in a diamond. Carbon is carbon. It's just that in diamond, the atoms of carbon have been forced into lattice, and it takes a lot of heat and pressure to make that happen.
Thermosphere or the ionosphere is the thickest layer on earth. It reaches a height 400 kilometers.
No, diamonds don't surround the earth's mantle. Diamonds are formed within the earth's mantle, and are rare.