Unless us humans find more powerful bombs because we cannot be at peace with each other, then no, the Earth will not explode.
The Sun will not explode either. At the end of the sun's life (4 - 4.5 billion years from now), the sun will balloon to a huge size, engulfing Mercury and Venus. If could engulf Earth too, but is expected to stop short of Earth's orbit. The extreme heat from the Sun will kill all life as we know it on Earth. This could possibly mean that Mars will find itself in the 'habitual zone' and become our haven from Earth.
2007-03-16 22:02:30
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answer #1
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answered by Feckpot 2
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Sorry no explosion. Depending on gravity it's just likely that the Earth will in several billion years be a frozen planet orbiting a small white dwarf in a quite part of the galaxy.
About 1 billion years from now the Sun will start to change and it's brightness and radiation output will start to increase, while it's possible that the Earth's biosphere would be able to compensate for some of this, after a few hundred million years or so the radiation output would be dangerous for most surface life, the temperatures will start to increase and solar storms powerful enough to start to erode the atmosphere will start to buffet the planet.
The heat output of the sun will increase and the orbit of Mars and then Jupiter will become temperate but that will be very near the end of the sun's life as a normal star.
Eventually any life remaining on Earth will exist as subterranean life, in cachements and underground aquifers.
As the sun gets older still, it will become larger, this is where gravity becomes a factor. If the sun becomes larger, its center of gravity will expand with it. Since the center of gravity is changing, depending of how fast and large that expansion is, it's possible that the lower mass (and hence gravity) at the very center will cause the orbit of the Earth (and all of the other planets) to shift outward.
There is the possibility that when the day comes, that when the Sun finally looses it's battle between fusion and gravity that the force of the explosion would be enough to cause the Earth to be disintegrated - but that's not really blown up - exactly.
2007-03-16 20:08:07
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answer #2
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answered by Mark T 7
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Do you know how old earth is? Do you know that there are planets older than planet earth? If you think that earth may explode, why does the other planet older than planet earth do not explode? That means that planets will not explode. Stars explode because of chemical contents found in stars that make it explode. Planets are not stars therefore planets will not explode.
But IT IS POSSIBLE THAT planets that sorrounds a star will be affected. Our sun is a star, so don't you ever wish that sun will explode. Let us just be thankful to God that He has blessed us with so many things and pray that peace will reign over earth. Let us also make our environment clean so that we can help make Planet Earth healthy.
2007-03-17 02:36:16
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answer #3
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answered by red scar 2
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Next week, I just ate this big bean burrito and I'm all bound up! Earth will not explode! In about 5 billion years it will be cosnumed by the sun when the sun expands into a red giant star.
2007-03-17 00:45:45
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answer #4
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answered by Kenneth H 3
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Unless there is some huge meteor or some passing star hits our earth it could'nt possible explode , but hey there is changes of some nations and terrorists who can have these as the last idea..
2007-03-16 19:58:50
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answer #5
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answered by Rocky 3
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Yes our sun is a star and all stars go supernova and when it does it will blow up the earth along with the other planets in our system but it wont happen for another 500,000 to 1,000,000 years
2007-03-16 20:02:56
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answer #6
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answered by Ed 1
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YA DUH!!!! c man the sun's got strong gravitational power so itz attracting all de stuff arnd it slowly .....in de end earth's gonna hav contact with sun ...woah izz gonna b hot ...And i think itz gonna happen soon ( 100 years) ...all these climatic changes mean sumthing mann...think abt it...tc
2007-03-16 22:27:08
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answer #7
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answered by Abdul 2
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Yes it will.
Saw it on the Discovery Chnl.
In about 100,000 years or so.
2007-03-16 19:58:39
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answer #8
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answered by jrbaca 2
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wellllll......lemme see......it may....but not untill ur alive
2007-03-16 19:58:45
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answer #9
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answered by nick answers 1
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No.
2007-03-16 19:59:00
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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