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2007-06-09 16:34:24 · 16 answers · asked by sakura_cuteygirl 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

16 answers

Everything on earth would slowly freeze to death. The surface would probably become too cold to sustain any life in less than a few months. The seas could probably survive for several years due to warming from the center of the earh and radioactive decay.

2007-06-09 16:43:05 · answer #1 · answered by MSG 4 · 0 1

Have you the common sense to know that all life depends on the energy of the Sun, both directly and indirectly? Obviously, not.

No light, no photosynthesis by plants. Oxygen supply runs out. We die of suffication -- in the dark.

No light, plants die. Plants die, then animals and humans die by starvation -- in the dark.

No Sun, no solar heat. No solar heat, then all living things soon freeze --- freeze to death --- in the dark.

Please, do a little research before asking questions.

2007-06-09 16:48:33 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Everything would eventually die.

It would not take long for most life on the planet to freeze to death, maybe one or two "days" (i.e. 24-48 hours, we would not have "days" or "nights" without the sun).

If anything could survive as the temperature falls closer and closer to absolute zero, it would probably starve in a few more days, as plants would freeze and die, same with bacteria.

I would imagine that all life on the planet would not survive longer than a week.

2007-06-09 16:48:07 · answer #3 · answered by easymac 4 · 0 1

Well, unless we have the technology that holds energy and the capabilities to hold in the heat and light, we and our plants can't live. However, there is of course scientists that are willing to grow crops in space and using technology that could potentially hold in our atmosphere.

Of course, humans on our planet has a big advantage over other creatures, and that we could develop a technology that could potentially make it possible to sustain life for long periods of time without the need of the sun, as well as defending our planet from mass sized astroids that destroyed the dinosaurs.

2007-06-09 19:02:39 · answer #4 · answered by ? 1 · 0 2

The planet would get thrown into the middle of space (unless we got lucky enough to start orbiting another star very quickly, which certainly wouldn't happen) and we would very quickly freeze to death (it really wouldn't be slow at all, despite what many people are saying).

2007-06-09 16:44:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It would get too cold to survive far before the effect of not having UV light for plants to live....Otherwise we'd plunge into the -100's quite easily.

2007-06-09 16:44:21 · answer #6 · answered by Cyberwolf 3 · 0 1

the age of the sun if far more greater than that of earth, so earth will vanish before the sun would.

moreover, if sun would disappear before earth then, the earth will shoot out of its orbit and the large centrifugal force resulting will cause the organisms, who were towards the the sun, to get pulled out of the earth atmosphere and those organisms who were on the opposite side of sun will be buried inside the earth due to 3 force - earth's gravitational force , inertia force and the psedo centrifugal force

2007-06-09 17:10:02 · answer #7 · answered by tarun_maths 1 · 0 2

Humans would die within a few days to a week. All other living things would probably die within 2 weeks.

2007-06-09 16:49:07 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

The world as we know it would die quickly.

2007-06-09 16:42:32 · answer #9 · answered by HubbaBubba66 2 · 0 1

Most of them would die off.

2007-06-09 16:42:33 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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