How could it rain oil?












6












$begingroup$


It’s 2019 in an alternate steampunk/dieselpunk universe. Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better. For now though, it’s enough to just complain about the weather. Smogs are a frequent occurrence, you really don’t want to breathe in the air, and to top it all off, sometimes it rains oil. The ground goes all slick, the walls have this slightly weird rainbow-y sheen, and it’s enough to make anyone think twice about heading outside if they can help it.



So: how can I get it to rain oil? I was thinking initially about strong winds/hurricanes that lift oil into the clouds, and then they fall down again, but I have no idea if that’s a reasonable suggestion. I’d like it still to rain normally, but this seemed like a way to still get oily ‘rain’. If that’s not feasible/if there’s another way, I’d be up for suggestions!



The technology level is anything industrial level or later, but no magic. Also, I’d like it be to habitable for humans if at all possible...



EDIT: Forgot to mention the kind of oil I was aiming for - probably something petroleum based, but definitely something used in a manufacturing process more than an organic or culinary kind of thing. (However, I admit I don’t know a grand deal about oil, so you’re welcome to argue the point if extra virgin olive oil is where I should be focusing my efforts).










share|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    By "oil" you mean petroleum?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexander
    Mar 9 at 0:24










  • $begingroup$
    @Alexander is correct. Please clarify: what specific type of oil are you referring to? Petroleum? vegetable? skin? blubber? etc.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 9 at 0:33










  • $begingroup$
    Good point, will update for that now.
    $endgroup$
    – K. Price
    Mar 9 at 3:04










  • $begingroup$
    "Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better." So 2019, our timeline?
    $endgroup$
    – AngelPray
    Mar 9 at 3:11






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    See Titan, Saturn's moon's atmosphere is just one ingredient shy of becoming crude oil... go figure!
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 9 at 4:08


















6












$begingroup$


It’s 2019 in an alternate steampunk/dieselpunk universe. Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better. For now though, it’s enough to just complain about the weather. Smogs are a frequent occurrence, you really don’t want to breathe in the air, and to top it all off, sometimes it rains oil. The ground goes all slick, the walls have this slightly weird rainbow-y sheen, and it’s enough to make anyone think twice about heading outside if they can help it.



So: how can I get it to rain oil? I was thinking initially about strong winds/hurricanes that lift oil into the clouds, and then they fall down again, but I have no idea if that’s a reasonable suggestion. I’d like it still to rain normally, but this seemed like a way to still get oily ‘rain’. If that’s not feasible/if there’s another way, I’d be up for suggestions!



The technology level is anything industrial level or later, but no magic. Also, I’d like it be to habitable for humans if at all possible...



EDIT: Forgot to mention the kind of oil I was aiming for - probably something petroleum based, but definitely something used in a manufacturing process more than an organic or culinary kind of thing. (However, I admit I don’t know a grand deal about oil, so you’re welcome to argue the point if extra virgin olive oil is where I should be focusing my efforts).










share|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    By "oil" you mean petroleum?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexander
    Mar 9 at 0:24










  • $begingroup$
    @Alexander is correct. Please clarify: what specific type of oil are you referring to? Petroleum? vegetable? skin? blubber? etc.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 9 at 0:33










  • $begingroup$
    Good point, will update for that now.
    $endgroup$
    – K. Price
    Mar 9 at 3:04










  • $begingroup$
    "Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better." So 2019, our timeline?
    $endgroup$
    – AngelPray
    Mar 9 at 3:11






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    See Titan, Saturn's moon's atmosphere is just one ingredient shy of becoming crude oil... go figure!
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 9 at 4:08
















6












6








6


2



$begingroup$


It’s 2019 in an alternate steampunk/dieselpunk universe. Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better. For now though, it’s enough to just complain about the weather. Smogs are a frequent occurrence, you really don’t want to breathe in the air, and to top it all off, sometimes it rains oil. The ground goes all slick, the walls have this slightly weird rainbow-y sheen, and it’s enough to make anyone think twice about heading outside if they can help it.



So: how can I get it to rain oil? I was thinking initially about strong winds/hurricanes that lift oil into the clouds, and then they fall down again, but I have no idea if that’s a reasonable suggestion. I’d like it still to rain normally, but this seemed like a way to still get oily ‘rain’. If that’s not feasible/if there’s another way, I’d be up for suggestions!



The technology level is anything industrial level or later, but no magic. Also, I’d like it be to habitable for humans if at all possible...



EDIT: Forgot to mention the kind of oil I was aiming for - probably something petroleum based, but definitely something used in a manufacturing process more than an organic or culinary kind of thing. (However, I admit I don’t know a grand deal about oil, so you’re welcome to argue the point if extra virgin olive oil is where I should be focusing my efforts).










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




It’s 2019 in an alternate steampunk/dieselpunk universe. Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better. For now though, it’s enough to just complain about the weather. Smogs are a frequent occurrence, you really don’t want to breathe in the air, and to top it all off, sometimes it rains oil. The ground goes all slick, the walls have this slightly weird rainbow-y sheen, and it’s enough to make anyone think twice about heading outside if they can help it.



So: how can I get it to rain oil? I was thinking initially about strong winds/hurricanes that lift oil into the clouds, and then they fall down again, but I have no idea if that’s a reasonable suggestion. I’d like it still to rain normally, but this seemed like a way to still get oily ‘rain’. If that’s not feasible/if there’s another way, I’d be up for suggestions!



The technology level is anything industrial level or later, but no magic. Also, I’d like it be to habitable for humans if at all possible...



EDIT: Forgot to mention the kind of oil I was aiming for - probably something petroleum based, but definitely something used in a manufacturing process more than an organic or culinary kind of thing. (However, I admit I don’t know a grand deal about oil, so you’re welcome to argue the point if extra virgin olive oil is where I should be focusing my efforts).







weather steampunk






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 9 at 3:08







K. Price

















asked Mar 9 at 0:07









K. PriceK. Price

2,9171825




2,9171825








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    By "oil" you mean petroleum?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexander
    Mar 9 at 0:24










  • $begingroup$
    @Alexander is correct. Please clarify: what specific type of oil are you referring to? Petroleum? vegetable? skin? blubber? etc.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 9 at 0:33










  • $begingroup$
    Good point, will update for that now.
    $endgroup$
    – K. Price
    Mar 9 at 3:04










  • $begingroup$
    "Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better." So 2019, our timeline?
    $endgroup$
    – AngelPray
    Mar 9 at 3:11






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    See Titan, Saturn's moon's atmosphere is just one ingredient shy of becoming crude oil... go figure!
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 9 at 4:08
















  • 2




    $begingroup$
    By "oil" you mean petroleum?
    $endgroup$
    – Alexander
    Mar 9 at 0:24










  • $begingroup$
    @Alexander is correct. Please clarify: what specific type of oil are you referring to? Petroleum? vegetable? skin? blubber? etc.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 9 at 0:33










  • $begingroup$
    Good point, will update for that now.
    $endgroup$
    – K. Price
    Mar 9 at 3:04










  • $begingroup$
    "Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better." So 2019, our timeline?
    $endgroup$
    – AngelPray
    Mar 9 at 3:11






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    See Titan, Saturn's moon's atmosphere is just one ingredient shy of becoming crude oil... go figure!
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 9 at 4:08










2




2




$begingroup$
By "oil" you mean petroleum?
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Mar 9 at 0:24




$begingroup$
By "oil" you mean petroleum?
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Mar 9 at 0:24












$begingroup$
@Alexander is correct. Please clarify: what specific type of oil are you referring to? Petroleum? vegetable? skin? blubber? etc.
$endgroup$
– JBH
Mar 9 at 0:33




$begingroup$
@Alexander is correct. Please clarify: what specific type of oil are you referring to? Petroleum? vegetable? skin? blubber? etc.
$endgroup$
– JBH
Mar 9 at 0:33












$begingroup$
Good point, will update for that now.
$endgroup$
– K. Price
Mar 9 at 3:04




$begingroup$
Good point, will update for that now.
$endgroup$
– K. Price
Mar 9 at 3:04












$begingroup$
"Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better." So 2019, our timeline?
$endgroup$
– AngelPray
Mar 9 at 3:11




$begingroup$
"Population growth, dwindling resources, and the evil overlords have everyone cramped into big cities, toiling away in the hope of something better." So 2019, our timeline?
$endgroup$
– AngelPray
Mar 9 at 3:11




1




1




$begingroup$
See Titan, Saturn's moon's atmosphere is just one ingredient shy of becoming crude oil... go figure!
$endgroup$
– user6760
Mar 9 at 4:08






$begingroup$
See Titan, Saturn's moon's atmosphere is just one ingredient shy of becoming crude oil... go figure!
$endgroup$
– user6760
Mar 9 at 4:08












4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















6












$begingroup$

It wouldn't be pure oil but it could be usable with some processing:



Have airborne oil producing plankton. The bloom in clouds because of the condensed water droplets. They might make even more clouds by being condensation nuclei.



The plankton takes in water, CO2, trace elements from dust, and sunlight. It uses that to produce oil. The oil forms a film on the water droplets and increases their surface tension. I don't know if the surface tension would increase the chance of big drops forming or decrease it. However, that coating would make the rain drops shimmer in the sunlight. That may be a good visual for your story.



The drops that fall will be mostly water but if you can separate the oil out, you get your oil.



So, you have slightly green fluffy clouds that get much darker green (going to black) that then rain shimmering drops.



Come to think of it, trying to use windshield wipers would suck with the constant oil film.



Hmmm... Cumulonimbus: giant lightning broccoli.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
    $endgroup$
    – Giu Piete
    Mar 9 at 15:23










  • $begingroup$
    @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
    $endgroup$
    – ShadoCat
    Mar 13 at 22:10



















6












$begingroup$

Lots of airships.



Oil mist consists of micron-sized particles of oil suspended in the air. It can be produced in a variety of ways, but in general, it's aerosolized lubricant from a mechanical device. It's a fairly common hazard in machine shops, and a significant enough hazard on ships that all ships with engines over 2250 kW must be equipped with detectors.



In a steampunk world, with overly gratuitous airship traffic, perhaps those airships are creating enough oil mist for it to collect in the atmosphere and rain down to Earth. This could be due to either standard mechanical negligence, with old and leaky engines producing much of the mist, or perhaps because the safest way to handle oil mist on an airship is to vent it out into the atmosphere and rely on it diluting out to non-explosive concentrations.



Either way, the oil mist is gathered into clouds where it rains down as part of an otherwise-normal rain storm. It's unlikely that sufficient oil would be present to become an acute fire hazard, but it wouldn't be difficult to imagine that enough would collect to make the ground slick and give everything a nice oily sheen. All it would take would be enough airships.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$





















    2












    $begingroup$

    Siloxane pollution.



    Siloxanes are silicon oxygen polymers in the silicone family, slippery and volatile. The silicon sounds exotic but siloxanes are in lots of consumer products, like shampoo and personal lubricants. Depicted: Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane.



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane




    Cyclomethicones are a group of methyl siloxanes, a class of liquid
    silicones (cyclic polydimethylsiloxane polymers) that possess the
    characteristics of low viscosity and high volatility as well as being
    skin emollients and in certain circumstances useful cleaning
    solvents... Cyclomethicones have short backbones that make closed or
    nearly-closed rings or "cycles" with their methyl groups, giving them
    many of the same properties of dimethicones but making them much more
    volatile.




    Siloxane pollution is a thing in the real world, and these molecules move from the many commercial products containing them into the environment.
    https://cvskinlabs.com/7-cosmetic-ingredients-that-are-bad-for-the-environment/



    In your world, there are some big sources of atmospheric siloxanes - I was thinking scavenged or repurposed alien tech, or possibly building treatments to protect against pollution. These volatile siloxanes condense or precipitate out under the right conditions, forming a greasy Astrolube-like rain.



    I like siloxanes for this question because in the siloxanes are real, useful, do form atmospheric pollution, are oils, and the words "siloxane" is good stuff for scifi. Also to my knowledge it has not been done.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      So... it’s raining lube??
      $endgroup$
      – Joe Bloggs
      Mar 9 at 15:47










    • $begingroup$
      @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
      $endgroup$
      – Willk
      Mar 9 at 19:57



















    0












    $begingroup$

    Not normal rain, at least not in a world humans can live on the the vapor point of oils is way above boiling, if the air is warm enough to hold oil it is hot enough to kill any human who breaths it.



    your best bet is tornado lifting, but that will be a regional and fairly rare occurrence.






    share|improve this answer









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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      6












      $begingroup$

      It wouldn't be pure oil but it could be usable with some processing:



      Have airborne oil producing plankton. The bloom in clouds because of the condensed water droplets. They might make even more clouds by being condensation nuclei.



      The plankton takes in water, CO2, trace elements from dust, and sunlight. It uses that to produce oil. The oil forms a film on the water droplets and increases their surface tension. I don't know if the surface tension would increase the chance of big drops forming or decrease it. However, that coating would make the rain drops shimmer in the sunlight. That may be a good visual for your story.



      The drops that fall will be mostly water but if you can separate the oil out, you get your oil.



      So, you have slightly green fluffy clouds that get much darker green (going to black) that then rain shimmering drops.



      Come to think of it, trying to use windshield wipers would suck with the constant oil film.



      Hmmm... Cumulonimbus: giant lightning broccoli.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$









      • 1




        $begingroup$
        'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
        $endgroup$
        – Giu Piete
        Mar 9 at 15:23










      • $begingroup$
        @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
        $endgroup$
        – ShadoCat
        Mar 13 at 22:10
















      6












      $begingroup$

      It wouldn't be pure oil but it could be usable with some processing:



      Have airborne oil producing plankton. The bloom in clouds because of the condensed water droplets. They might make even more clouds by being condensation nuclei.



      The plankton takes in water, CO2, trace elements from dust, and sunlight. It uses that to produce oil. The oil forms a film on the water droplets and increases their surface tension. I don't know if the surface tension would increase the chance of big drops forming or decrease it. However, that coating would make the rain drops shimmer in the sunlight. That may be a good visual for your story.



      The drops that fall will be mostly water but if you can separate the oil out, you get your oil.



      So, you have slightly green fluffy clouds that get much darker green (going to black) that then rain shimmering drops.



      Come to think of it, trying to use windshield wipers would suck with the constant oil film.



      Hmmm... Cumulonimbus: giant lightning broccoli.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$









      • 1




        $begingroup$
        'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
        $endgroup$
        – Giu Piete
        Mar 9 at 15:23










      • $begingroup$
        @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
        $endgroup$
        – ShadoCat
        Mar 13 at 22:10














      6












      6








      6





      $begingroup$

      It wouldn't be pure oil but it could be usable with some processing:



      Have airborne oil producing plankton. The bloom in clouds because of the condensed water droplets. They might make even more clouds by being condensation nuclei.



      The plankton takes in water, CO2, trace elements from dust, and sunlight. It uses that to produce oil. The oil forms a film on the water droplets and increases their surface tension. I don't know if the surface tension would increase the chance of big drops forming or decrease it. However, that coating would make the rain drops shimmer in the sunlight. That may be a good visual for your story.



      The drops that fall will be mostly water but if you can separate the oil out, you get your oil.



      So, you have slightly green fluffy clouds that get much darker green (going to black) that then rain shimmering drops.



      Come to think of it, trying to use windshield wipers would suck with the constant oil film.



      Hmmm... Cumulonimbus: giant lightning broccoli.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$



      It wouldn't be pure oil but it could be usable with some processing:



      Have airborne oil producing plankton. The bloom in clouds because of the condensed water droplets. They might make even more clouds by being condensation nuclei.



      The plankton takes in water, CO2, trace elements from dust, and sunlight. It uses that to produce oil. The oil forms a film on the water droplets and increases their surface tension. I don't know if the surface tension would increase the chance of big drops forming or decrease it. However, that coating would make the rain drops shimmer in the sunlight. That may be a good visual for your story.



      The drops that fall will be mostly water but if you can separate the oil out, you get your oil.



      So, you have slightly green fluffy clouds that get much darker green (going to black) that then rain shimmering drops.



      Come to think of it, trying to use windshield wipers would suck with the constant oil film.



      Hmmm... Cumulonimbus: giant lightning broccoli.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Mar 9 at 0:19









      ShadoCatShadoCat

      15.6k2054




      15.6k2054








      • 1




        $begingroup$
        'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
        $endgroup$
        – Giu Piete
        Mar 9 at 15:23










      • $begingroup$
        @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
        $endgroup$
        – ShadoCat
        Mar 13 at 22:10














      • 1




        $begingroup$
        'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
        $endgroup$
        – Giu Piete
        Mar 9 at 15:23










      • $begingroup$
        @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
        $endgroup$
        – ShadoCat
        Mar 13 at 22:10








      1




      1




      $begingroup$
      'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
      $endgroup$
      – Giu Piete
      Mar 9 at 15:23




      $begingroup$
      'V-2 Launch ignites atmosphere, Von Braun saves Europe from the Nazis by killing everybody in it.'
      $endgroup$
      – Giu Piete
      Mar 9 at 15:23












      $begingroup$
      @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
      $endgroup$
      – ShadoCat
      Mar 13 at 22:10




      $begingroup$
      @GiuPiete, Heh. Though I don't think the concentrations will be high enough for that.
      $endgroup$
      – ShadoCat
      Mar 13 at 22:10











      6












      $begingroup$

      Lots of airships.



      Oil mist consists of micron-sized particles of oil suspended in the air. It can be produced in a variety of ways, but in general, it's aerosolized lubricant from a mechanical device. It's a fairly common hazard in machine shops, and a significant enough hazard on ships that all ships with engines over 2250 kW must be equipped with detectors.



      In a steampunk world, with overly gratuitous airship traffic, perhaps those airships are creating enough oil mist for it to collect in the atmosphere and rain down to Earth. This could be due to either standard mechanical negligence, with old and leaky engines producing much of the mist, or perhaps because the safest way to handle oil mist on an airship is to vent it out into the atmosphere and rely on it diluting out to non-explosive concentrations.



      Either way, the oil mist is gathered into clouds where it rains down as part of an otherwise-normal rain storm. It's unlikely that sufficient oil would be present to become an acute fire hazard, but it wouldn't be difficult to imagine that enough would collect to make the ground slick and give everything a nice oily sheen. All it would take would be enough airships.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$


















        6












        $begingroup$

        Lots of airships.



        Oil mist consists of micron-sized particles of oil suspended in the air. It can be produced in a variety of ways, but in general, it's aerosolized lubricant from a mechanical device. It's a fairly common hazard in machine shops, and a significant enough hazard on ships that all ships with engines over 2250 kW must be equipped with detectors.



        In a steampunk world, with overly gratuitous airship traffic, perhaps those airships are creating enough oil mist for it to collect in the atmosphere and rain down to Earth. This could be due to either standard mechanical negligence, with old and leaky engines producing much of the mist, or perhaps because the safest way to handle oil mist on an airship is to vent it out into the atmosphere and rely on it diluting out to non-explosive concentrations.



        Either way, the oil mist is gathered into clouds where it rains down as part of an otherwise-normal rain storm. It's unlikely that sufficient oil would be present to become an acute fire hazard, but it wouldn't be difficult to imagine that enough would collect to make the ground slick and give everything a nice oily sheen. All it would take would be enough airships.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$
















          6












          6








          6





          $begingroup$

          Lots of airships.



          Oil mist consists of micron-sized particles of oil suspended in the air. It can be produced in a variety of ways, but in general, it's aerosolized lubricant from a mechanical device. It's a fairly common hazard in machine shops, and a significant enough hazard on ships that all ships with engines over 2250 kW must be equipped with detectors.



          In a steampunk world, with overly gratuitous airship traffic, perhaps those airships are creating enough oil mist for it to collect in the atmosphere and rain down to Earth. This could be due to either standard mechanical negligence, with old and leaky engines producing much of the mist, or perhaps because the safest way to handle oil mist on an airship is to vent it out into the atmosphere and rely on it diluting out to non-explosive concentrations.



          Either way, the oil mist is gathered into clouds where it rains down as part of an otherwise-normal rain storm. It's unlikely that sufficient oil would be present to become an acute fire hazard, but it wouldn't be difficult to imagine that enough would collect to make the ground slick and give everything a nice oily sheen. All it would take would be enough airships.






          share|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          Lots of airships.



          Oil mist consists of micron-sized particles of oil suspended in the air. It can be produced in a variety of ways, but in general, it's aerosolized lubricant from a mechanical device. It's a fairly common hazard in machine shops, and a significant enough hazard on ships that all ships with engines over 2250 kW must be equipped with detectors.



          In a steampunk world, with overly gratuitous airship traffic, perhaps those airships are creating enough oil mist for it to collect in the atmosphere and rain down to Earth. This could be due to either standard mechanical negligence, with old and leaky engines producing much of the mist, or perhaps because the safest way to handle oil mist on an airship is to vent it out into the atmosphere and rely on it diluting out to non-explosive concentrations.



          Either way, the oil mist is gathered into clouds where it rains down as part of an otherwise-normal rain storm. It's unlikely that sufficient oil would be present to become an acute fire hazard, but it wouldn't be difficult to imagine that enough would collect to make the ground slick and give everything a nice oily sheen. All it would take would be enough airships.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 9 at 1:06









          ckerschckersch

          37.1k1098176




          37.1k1098176























              2












              $begingroup$

              Siloxane pollution.



              Siloxanes are silicon oxygen polymers in the silicone family, slippery and volatile. The silicon sounds exotic but siloxanes are in lots of consumer products, like shampoo and personal lubricants. Depicted: Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane.



              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane




              Cyclomethicones are a group of methyl siloxanes, a class of liquid
              silicones (cyclic polydimethylsiloxane polymers) that possess the
              characteristics of low viscosity and high volatility as well as being
              skin emollients and in certain circumstances useful cleaning
              solvents... Cyclomethicones have short backbones that make closed or
              nearly-closed rings or "cycles" with their methyl groups, giving them
              many of the same properties of dimethicones but making them much more
              volatile.




              Siloxane pollution is a thing in the real world, and these molecules move from the many commercial products containing them into the environment.
              https://cvskinlabs.com/7-cosmetic-ingredients-that-are-bad-for-the-environment/



              In your world, there are some big sources of atmospheric siloxanes - I was thinking scavenged or repurposed alien tech, or possibly building treatments to protect against pollution. These volatile siloxanes condense or precipitate out under the right conditions, forming a greasy Astrolube-like rain.



              I like siloxanes for this question because in the siloxanes are real, useful, do form atmospheric pollution, are oils, and the words "siloxane" is good stuff for scifi. Also to my knowledge it has not been done.






              share|improve this answer











              $endgroup$









              • 1




                $begingroup$
                So... it’s raining lube??
                $endgroup$
                – Joe Bloggs
                Mar 9 at 15:47










              • $begingroup$
                @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
                $endgroup$
                – Willk
                Mar 9 at 19:57
















              2












              $begingroup$

              Siloxane pollution.



              Siloxanes are silicon oxygen polymers in the silicone family, slippery and volatile. The silicon sounds exotic but siloxanes are in lots of consumer products, like shampoo and personal lubricants. Depicted: Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane.



              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane




              Cyclomethicones are a group of methyl siloxanes, a class of liquid
              silicones (cyclic polydimethylsiloxane polymers) that possess the
              characteristics of low viscosity and high volatility as well as being
              skin emollients and in certain circumstances useful cleaning
              solvents... Cyclomethicones have short backbones that make closed or
              nearly-closed rings or "cycles" with their methyl groups, giving them
              many of the same properties of dimethicones but making them much more
              volatile.




              Siloxane pollution is a thing in the real world, and these molecules move from the many commercial products containing them into the environment.
              https://cvskinlabs.com/7-cosmetic-ingredients-that-are-bad-for-the-environment/



              In your world, there are some big sources of atmospheric siloxanes - I was thinking scavenged or repurposed alien tech, or possibly building treatments to protect against pollution. These volatile siloxanes condense or precipitate out under the right conditions, forming a greasy Astrolube-like rain.



              I like siloxanes for this question because in the siloxanes are real, useful, do form atmospheric pollution, are oils, and the words "siloxane" is good stuff for scifi. Also to my knowledge it has not been done.






              share|improve this answer











              $endgroup$









              • 1




                $begingroup$
                So... it’s raining lube??
                $endgroup$
                – Joe Bloggs
                Mar 9 at 15:47










              • $begingroup$
                @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
                $endgroup$
                – Willk
                Mar 9 at 19:57














              2












              2








              2





              $begingroup$

              Siloxane pollution.



              Siloxanes are silicon oxygen polymers in the silicone family, slippery and volatile. The silicon sounds exotic but siloxanes are in lots of consumer products, like shampoo and personal lubricants. Depicted: Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane.



              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane




              Cyclomethicones are a group of methyl siloxanes, a class of liquid
              silicones (cyclic polydimethylsiloxane polymers) that possess the
              characteristics of low viscosity and high volatility as well as being
              skin emollients and in certain circumstances useful cleaning
              solvents... Cyclomethicones have short backbones that make closed or
              nearly-closed rings or "cycles" with their methyl groups, giving them
              many of the same properties of dimethicones but making them much more
              volatile.




              Siloxane pollution is a thing in the real world, and these molecules move from the many commercial products containing them into the environment.
              https://cvskinlabs.com/7-cosmetic-ingredients-that-are-bad-for-the-environment/



              In your world, there are some big sources of atmospheric siloxanes - I was thinking scavenged or repurposed alien tech, or possibly building treatments to protect against pollution. These volatile siloxanes condense or precipitate out under the right conditions, forming a greasy Astrolube-like rain.



              I like siloxanes for this question because in the siloxanes are real, useful, do form atmospheric pollution, are oils, and the words "siloxane" is good stuff for scifi. Also to my knowledge it has not been done.






              share|improve this answer











              $endgroup$



              Siloxane pollution.



              Siloxanes are silicon oxygen polymers in the silicone family, slippery and volatile. The silicon sounds exotic but siloxanes are in lots of consumer products, like shampoo and personal lubricants. Depicted: Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane.



              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decamethylcyclopentasiloxane




              Cyclomethicones are a group of methyl siloxanes, a class of liquid
              silicones (cyclic polydimethylsiloxane polymers) that possess the
              characteristics of low viscosity and high volatility as well as being
              skin emollients and in certain circumstances useful cleaning
              solvents... Cyclomethicones have short backbones that make closed or
              nearly-closed rings or "cycles" with their methyl groups, giving them
              many of the same properties of dimethicones but making them much more
              volatile.




              Siloxane pollution is a thing in the real world, and these molecules move from the many commercial products containing them into the environment.
              https://cvskinlabs.com/7-cosmetic-ingredients-that-are-bad-for-the-environment/



              In your world, there are some big sources of atmospheric siloxanes - I was thinking scavenged or repurposed alien tech, or possibly building treatments to protect against pollution. These volatile siloxanes condense or precipitate out under the right conditions, forming a greasy Astrolube-like rain.



              I like siloxanes for this question because in the siloxanes are real, useful, do form atmospheric pollution, are oils, and the words "siloxane" is good stuff for scifi. Also to my knowledge it has not been done.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Mar 9 at 14:54

























              answered Mar 9 at 3:01









              WillkWillk

              117k28221489




              117k28221489








              • 1




                $begingroup$
                So... it’s raining lube??
                $endgroup$
                – Joe Bloggs
                Mar 9 at 15:47










              • $begingroup$
                @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
                $endgroup$
                – Willk
                Mar 9 at 19:57














              • 1




                $begingroup$
                So... it’s raining lube??
                $endgroup$
                – Joe Bloggs
                Mar 9 at 15:47










              • $begingroup$
                @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
                $endgroup$
                – Willk
                Mar 9 at 19:57








              1




              1




              $begingroup$
              So... it’s raining lube??
              $endgroup$
              – Joe Bloggs
              Mar 9 at 15:47




              $begingroup$
              So... it’s raining lube??
              $endgroup$
              – Joe Bloggs
              Mar 9 at 15:47












              $begingroup$
              @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
              $endgroup$
              – Willk
              Mar 9 at 19:57




              $begingroup$
              @Joe Bloggs - Hallelujah!
              $endgroup$
              – Willk
              Mar 9 at 19:57











              0












              $begingroup$

              Not normal rain, at least not in a world humans can live on the the vapor point of oils is way above boiling, if the air is warm enough to hold oil it is hot enough to kill any human who breaths it.



              your best bet is tornado lifting, but that will be a regional and fairly rare occurrence.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$


















                0












                $begingroup$

                Not normal rain, at least not in a world humans can live on the the vapor point of oils is way above boiling, if the air is warm enough to hold oil it is hot enough to kill any human who breaths it.



                your best bet is tornado lifting, but that will be a regional and fairly rare occurrence.






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$
















                  0












                  0








                  0





                  $begingroup$

                  Not normal rain, at least not in a world humans can live on the the vapor point of oils is way above boiling, if the air is warm enough to hold oil it is hot enough to kill any human who breaths it.



                  your best bet is tornado lifting, but that will be a regional and fairly rare occurrence.






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  Not normal rain, at least not in a world humans can live on the the vapor point of oils is way above boiling, if the air is warm enough to hold oil it is hot enough to kill any human who breaths it.



                  your best bet is tornado lifting, but that will be a regional and fairly rare occurrence.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 9 at 15:13









                  JohnJohn

                  36.2k1048122




                  36.2k1048122






























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