Of course the sun will die one day... but why should we be worried? The cosmic system is not the creation of a day... it took millions of years before mother earth becoming a life supporting planet. Let us understand the cosmic chronology:
All souls’ atmans manifesting on Mother Earth can never free themselves of the solar system until every life form reaches the stage of enlightenment... and that happens only in the form of human beings. For a soul atman from start to finish... is a long cosmic cycle of 8.4 million manifestations... an earthly abode of 96.4 million years. It is only then soul reaches the stage of enlightenment (kaivalya jnana) and finally salvation (moksha).
There are not millions or billions of souls connected to the solar system... the count definitely exceed trillions. And if a soul requires 96.4 million years of earthly journey before it liberates forever from the cycle of birth and death forever... it means we have many trillions years further to go before the sun dies.
Unless every single soul atman connected to the solar system reaches the last leg of cosmic life... the 8.4 million manifestation... the sun simply cannot die. Why? For in the core of sun hibernate all souls atmans whenever matching parents are not available on Mother Earth. Heaven exists in the core of the sun where temperatures exceed millions of degrees centigrade. It is in such temperatures the soul atman feels comfortable.
The moment all souls’ atmans regain their original pure pristine form... and go back to the kingdom of God (aka Baikuntha in Hinduism)... a point of no return... the purpose of sun would have been served. Soon after it shall die a natural death! More on why god made this world - http://www.godrealized.org/why_god_made_this_world.html
2007-06-04 01:58:55
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answer #1
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answered by godrealized 6
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Yep it will...unless...
In 5 Billion years time, humanity defies all the odds (just like today) and gets to see the sun die...what would we do ?
Well if we get to 5 Billion years, at our current rate of tech growth we will be some kinda super beings who make universe's and with a click of the fingers wo what ever we like ! so we would have re fuled the sun long ago made earth into a museum of some kind and all gone God complex and dramatic.
So if it dies we wont care cos were all gone, or it live forever as a trinket from our past, like some musty old castle does today.
2007-06-01 12:45:07
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answer #2
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answered by Elizabeth 1
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The sun still has enough energy to use for the next 5 billion years, and that would be until when it expands to become a red giant. A red giant sun would engulf but not destroy all of what's in the inner solar system (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) and then throw off its internal surface as a nova. By 6 billion years, the sun becomes a white dwarf before it loses all of its energy to a black dwarf, which therefore leads to the death of the sun. By then, humanity as we know it would have abandoned Earth for other planets beyond our solar system.
There is no need to worry about the death of our sun because....6 billion years is a very long time from now!
2007-06-01 09:36:37
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answer #3
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answered by Erik G 4
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It's expected to.
This is the theory.
One day the Sun will burn enough of its mass so that its gravity can no longer maintain its current boundaries. It is expected to expand so that it's corona extends possibly to include the orbit of the Earth.
After it expends a little more of its energy and burns more of its mass, it will again shrink into what I believe is called a "yellow dwarf." When that happens, there will be very light and heat produced. It will probably appear much smaller in the sky than our moon does today. But, since it's not producing much light, the moon would probably be invisible.
Eventually, I suspect that even that energy will be used up. I have no idea what will remain. If there is any matter left, I'd guess it'll be a rock, probably pretty dense..
But you don't have to worry about taking out "Sun Burn Out Insurance." If it happens while there is still a vestige of life on earth, the process will kill it. Besides, the way we're going, we'll either pollute ourselves out of existence, overpopulate ourselves out of existence, or blow our selves out of existence, long before that happens.
2007-06-01 08:51:11
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answer #4
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answered by gugliamo00 7
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Yes. Our sun, sol, is a medium yellow star, which has an approximate lifespan of 10 billion years, 4.5 of which have already passed. In approximately 5.5 billion years, the sun will go nova: it will exhaust its source of hydrogen that it uses to undergo nuclear fusion, and all that will be left is helium. Once fusion stops, the sun's internal gravitational field will begin to collapse. This will make the outer layers of the sun expand outward, enveloping all of the inner planets. When the hydrogen is completely gone, a limited amount of helium fusion will begin, which will increase the gravitational field enough to make the sun collapse and implode. After implosion, all of the gases of the sun will be scattered throughout the system, which will form an astronomical cloud, which will begin to condense into a new star, new planets, new asteroids, and this whole cycle will start over again. That's the most popular theory, anyway.
2007-06-01 08:45:24
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answer #5
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answered by Tha Nurd 3
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Will the sun ever stop shining?
Yes, but not for a very, very long time. Stars shine because a huge amount of energy is created in their cores by a process called nuclear fusion. Nuclear fusion happens when lighter elements, like hydrogen, are combined into heavier elements, like helium. In about 5 billion years, the hydrogen in the sun's core will run out and the sun will not have enough fuel for nuclear fusion. So, in about 5 billion years, the sun will stop shining. forever.
2007-06-01 08:41:27
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes But Not In Your Life Time Approximately Another 2 Billion Years Before It Died No Need To Worry :).
2007-06-01 08:40:14
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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From what I have earned in school a giant star make black holes three times bigger than our own sun that kill our stars. Stars die when they run out of hydrogen or other fuel to burn and start to cool off. I believe our son will die when the hydrogen cools off or other times of fuel start to burn....which I don't think will happen for a while now...
2007-06-01 09:22:49
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Yeah, it will but first it will become much larger and form a red giant and swallow many planets including the earth but you don't have to worry. that's in about 4 to 5 billion years from now. By then you'll not be here so just live life to it's fullest
note: 1 billion years is 1000000000 years
2007-06-01 08:44:50
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answer #9
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answered by Marc 1
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Yes it will. It may scare kids but not me. But it will die in about 5 billion years. So no one should actually worry.
2007-06-01 09:04:14
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answer #10
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answered by Flintstoner 4
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