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Ok, first i'm going to answer your question. No! Then I'll tell you exactly why. The Sun is not large enough. After billions of year, its fuel will run out and its size will swell tremendously to form a red giant. When its fuel completely runs out, the Sun will collapse under its own weight but because it's not large enough, instead of exploding, it will spread out its outer layers to form a planetary nebula, at the centre of which is the white-hot core, which will be known as a white dwarf star, possibly no larger than the Earth. Eventually the white dwarf will completely lose its ability to burn and its light will become extinguished forming a darkened version of the white dwarf known as a black dwarf.

2007-05-11 02:21:46 · answer #1 · answered by denwel33 5 · 1 0

.The sun is too small to become a black hole,even if a black hole could exist.
The sun will eventually swell and engulf the inner planets then contract and slowly die out.
This is an intolerable situation to a finite universe so the scenario must be quite different to this.
We are a member of the components of a spiral galaxy,the sun will eventually incorporated into the galactic center and go out of existence when the galaxy disappears.

2007-05-11 02:15:33 · answer #2 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

What maintains to be interior the "universal" universe while a black hollow is formed? short answer: The mass, momentum, can charge, and angular momentum of the issue that varieties the black hollow (to that end, the solar) maintains to be, however the conventional measurable radiation and particle emission (mild, image voltaic wind, and so forth) are caught up interior the singularity. in case you ought to answer the question, the instant answer is (C). it does not be (A) because of the fact a black hollow with the mass of the solar could be particularly small - a lot smaller than the "universal" solar - so the earth could be properly outdoors the radius of the black hollow. it does not be (B), when you consider that there's no fabric outdoors of the black hollow to "drag" the earth, so earth's orbit does not decay. it does not be (D) - that would ensue if the *mass* of the solar unexpectedly vanished. And it does not be (E), back, except some stress or merchandise bumped off earth's velocity and angular momentum, the only difficulty "drawing" the earth in may be the gravity of the black hollow, that's a similar because of the fact the gravity of the solar.

2017-01-09 15:37:56 · answer #3 · answered by porco 4 · 0 0

It would need at least 3 times its present mass. They should be called gravastars now. Even Prof. Hawking now believes that an event horizon contravenes the laws of physics, and without one, there can be no black holes (outdated1968 terminology!).

2007-05-11 01:54:02 · answer #4 · answered by CLICKHEREx 5 · 0 0

I don't think our sun is big enough to become a black hole.

2007-05-11 03:51:58 · answer #5 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 2 0

Yes. Stars cant live forever you know. But I bet by then they're will be little life left on the planet. There will be another world war.
The extraterrestrials will have rescued all the Scientology people. Everyone else will not survive. The only ones left will be th cockroaches. They will mutate into the perfect race.They will survive and rule the earth until the sun dies, turns into a black hole, and sucks the earth in.

2007-05-11 01:42:56 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 4

No. The sun does not have enough mass.

2007-05-11 01:40:19 · answer #7 · answered by Meredith L 1 · 4 0

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