We are almost done with exploring
heavenly bodies in this year’s April’s A-Z challenge. Y is for Yellow Dwarf. No, I don’t mean Snow White’s Asian suitor,
but a “g-type main-sequence star.” All
that gobble-goop means is a star like our sun!
These stars range in color from white to slightly yellow. Our sun is actually a white star but appears
more yellow because of our atmosphere. This
is something one might lose sleep over.
Our sun is burning 4 million tons of fuel a second. Imagine that number, 4 million tons a second! As it consumes this much fuel, it is producing
the equivalent energy of 60 billion times the electricity produced by all the
world’s power plants. The sun can’t keep
this up. Sooner or later the sun will
run out of fuel and then all our investments in solar energy will be
wasted. What are we to do?
Well, don’t sweat it, for as the sun
begins to run short on fuel, it’ll throw one final party as it bellows itself
into a red giant. Then you’ll sweat it,
but not for long for the earth will be consumed (as will we). But don’t worry too much, that shouldn’t
happen for another 4.5 billion years or so.
Chances are, we’ll all be long gone or have blown each other up by
then. After that last big party, the sun will dump a lot of its excessive matter, forming a planetary nebula as
the core gradually shrink into a white dwarf.
It would be pretty impressive if humans managed to survive 4.5 billion more years. I wonder how we'd evolve in that much time? Bald/hairless, no pinky toes, taller? Fun to think about. :)
ReplyDeleteA to Z 2017: Magical and Medicinal Herbs
I'm hoping that in time, we won't blow ourselves up and that we'll find a way to adapt and continue somehow, but that is a long time and who knows what will happen? Find me here. LINK
ReplyDeleteI guess I won't worry too much about 4.5 billion years from now. I've been trying to limit my worrying to the current day. That seems to be the only one I have much control over anyway, and even that is hard enough to manage some days. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting Sue's Trifles I'll explore your blog further, when I have time.
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ReplyDeleteAll this talk of things going belly up in 4.5 billion years from now or in the not so distant future, makes me wonder why? Is there a narrative I'm missing or is it just the way it was all supposed to be. A short post but with so much pondering packed in it.
ReplyDeleteY is for Yellow
That is a lot of fuel burning per second, Sage! Glad humans are harnessing some of it with solar panels. In 4.5 billion years, hopefully we'll have evolved to be able to live in space or somewhere other than Earth. If not, well, I'm sure we tried...
ReplyDeleteEmily | My Life In Ecuador | Yuletide at the Olón Orphanage
I wonder if we'll be coexisting with other species from other planets in the next billion years. So in 4 billion years we'll have another planet to move to when our sun burns out.
ReplyDelete4.5 billion years isn't long in the context of the universe.
ReplyDeleteYay for our sun, even if it IS rapidly (in universe time) burning itself out!
ReplyDeleteI loved your sarcasm in this post. 4.5 billion years or so? Great. I'm good! ;)
ReplyDeleteToo many things going on in today's world to be concerned with the sun burning out. Plus, I'm an optimist. I figure by the time it happens we'll have figured out space travel and have found other planets with younger suns. Fun post!WeekendsInMaine
ReplyDeleteHi Sage - thank goodness we've got 4.5 billion years to see us out - I think that will take me past my sell by date ... I'd love to hang around to see what else is going to be found out about the great huge space with diamonds in the sky out there ... but suspect not! Cheers and well done on all your zodiacal knowledge ... Hilary
ReplyDeletehttp://positiveletters.blogspot.co.uk/2017/04/z-is-for-zebra-zoo-and-zedland.html