What if water on Earth is depleted to pour into Mars?

If this process is done through a 10-meter teleport gate deep in the ocean of the Mariana ocean, it will take nearly 3 million years to drain Earth's water.

In 2014, the book What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions: What is the scientific answer to the utopian hypothetical question? The following hypothetical situation:

"What if there was a hole about 10 meters wide open under the Mariana ditch - Earth's deepest ocean groove?"

In the above hypothetical situation, the 10 meter hole is actually a space-shifting port connecting the Earth to Mars, and will drain Earth's sea water through it.

Picture 1 of What if water on Earth is depleted to pour into Mars?

According to the explanation of author Randall Munroe, nothing will change at first. The ocean is extremely large, and even when the port moves above and absorbs water at a dizzying speed, the ink drops only about 1cm a day.

" There is not even a whirlpool on the sea surface in the teleport gate opening. This gap is too small for the large ocean ."

However, several hundred thousand years later will change markedly. The lands that have been submerged under the ocean floor will once again show up, the continents separated by sea will once again be connected, and our Earth, seen from outer space will be different. completely different.

If you find it hard to imagine, don't worry about it. A member of Reddit with the nickname Vinnytsia created a video depicting the process of "Earth drained through the teleportation port connecting Mars to the bottom of the ocean":


Drain the Earth water.

The video above is based on data on the Ocean and Natural Reserves on Earth, as well as the map model from the open source government. In terms of shallow water, they calculated them according to the "simple version of the Bernoulli flow formula." In other words, the video is based on very thorough research, with a specific scientific basis.

On the side, what happens to this planet when it receives a huge amount of water from Earth? Does Mars become the second Earth? The author's answer, Randall Munroe is "No." The climatic conditions of Mars are extremely harsh and cold, so when the water on Earth falls there, the water will freeze, turning Mars into a frozen planet.