What would happen if the sun exploded?
The
sun is a yellow dwarf star and a hot ball of incandescent gases. Its gravity
contributes to the carrying of the solar system. It retains all planets, large
or small, in its orbit, and the electric currents generated in the sun create a
magnetic field. Through the solar system through the solar wind, a stream of
electrically charged gas that spews out from the sun in all directions, the
contact and interaction between the sun and the earth lead to the formation of
seasons, the movement of ocean currents, weather, and climate, radiation belts
and twilight, although the importance of the sun to the core, but there are
billions of stars such scattered across the Milky Way galaxy sun.
There
are several things to remember when talking about our nearby star (the sun):
The
light from the sun needs 8 minutes 20 seconds to touch the earth. If the sun
suddenly bursts, we will not be aware that it happened before these eight
minutes and twenty seconds. For some time as a spaceship, we do not care about
the nature of its movement for physics and mathematics because after this
explosion will infiltrate death and destruction in turn.
In
order for a star's life to end in the form of a supernova, the star's mass must
be 8 times larger than the Sun. So it is scientifically unlikely that the Sun
will explode.
If
the sun explodes, it is not like a candle that extinguishes it, and the energy
of the explosion is close to the explosion of a few octillion nuclear warheads
(octillion is the number one followed by 27 zero).
The
first thing you think about the Earth's atmosphere; if a star explodes away
from us 30 light-years in the form of a supernova, the Earth's atmosphere would
be damaged.
Of
course, the impact will be disastrous and no one will survive. The earth facing
the sun will crumble at a rate of several hundred meters per second. The
surface of the sun is today, and if we still have debris that will be thrown
beyond Pluto's borders today, at best we will have a few days to evaporate.
No comments:
Post a Comment