He day when humanity will explode the Sun and the entire solar system will be completely destroyed. Our days are numbered on a planet that seems to be living its last moments of agony. We see how more and more resources are disappearing and this with humanity having invaded a large part of the territory. So now will be the time to start thinking about what’s coming and whether we can cope with some changes that we may not have thought about until now.
Looking outside the planet is a way of preserving a humanity committed to a future of survival on a planet as similar as possible to the one it leaves behind. Without a doubt, we are faced with a series of elements that perhaps we would never have imagined until now. We are faced with a series of situations that we have not taken into account until now. A new reality which could be the one which will mark the destiny of each one. Without a doubt, we must know a Sun whose secret can leave us very far from what we imagined.
The day the Sun explodes
East the moment when you have to start seeing a series of details arrive which are fundamental and which we perhaps had not even imagined until now. We are undoubtedly facing a situation that can become a major problem. We are facing essential changes against which we must be very vigilant.
Now will be the time to start thinking about what’s to come, a situation that could end up being what marks a before and after. We have before us elements that will fully affect us, in days that are fundamental and can be significant.
The science details what lies ahead and how we need to start taking it into account. We must begin to take into account what really lies ahead of us in view of a destination which could prove to be crucial. We look at the sky and hope that something inevitable doesn’t happen. The reality is that we must see what time will bring us and how we will have to face it in these last days that await us.
Scientists set the date
There will be Now is the time to start thinking about the day when life will come to Earth, as we know it, it will disappear completely. Hand in hand with a series of elements that will make us rethink our destiny. Humanity seems to be looking into space, searching for a new Earth that will help us survive.
Continuing with the Royal Astronomical Society’s explanation: “Our solar system and everything in it, including Earth, will be very different when the Sun dies. But only time will tell if the planet we call home is “swallowed” by our dying star or manages to escape its clutches. The inner planets Mercury and Venus will almost certainly be crushed and swallowed up by the Sun, according to a new paper published today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS). But even if Earth survived its star, it would unfortunately not be habitable. On the plus side, it would at least fare better than some of Jupiter’s moons, which an international team of astrophysicists say could break up and shatter when the Sun runs out of energy. They made the terrifying prophecy about what our solar system could look like in five billion years after studying what happens to planetary systems like ours when their host stars become white dwarfs. “We don’t know if the Earth can move away fast enough before the Sun can catch up and burn it, but [si lo hace] the earth [aún] “It would lose its atmosphere and its ocean and it would not be a very pleasant place to live,” said Professor Boris Gaensicke, of the University of Warwick. If our planet were swallowed up by the Sun, along with Venus and Mercury, that would leave Mars and the four gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) orbiting what would ultimately be a white dwarf. Surviving asteroids and small moons would likely be broken into dust before falling into the dead star, the research team said. The Sun is currently burning hydrogen in its core, but once exhausted, it will expand and become a red giant, before turning into a white dwarf – the final state of stars when they have burned all their fuel. “The study of white dwarfs is useful because it provides insight into different aspects of star formation and evolution.”