Solar Week - Ask a Question



Come here during Solar Week (next one: March 22-26, 2021) to interact. To post a question, click on your area of interest from the topics below, and then click on the "Ask New Question" button. Or EMAIL or tweet or plant in Answer Garden your question about the Sun or life as a scientist to us -- and watch for it to appear here.  You can also visit our FAQs (frequently asked questions). In between Solar Weeks in October and March, you can view all the archives here.

PrevPrev Go to previous topic
NextNext Go to next topic
Last Post 10/15/2012 5:16 AM by  Terry Kucera
When will the Sun burn out?
 1 Replies
Sort:
You are not authorized to post a reply.
Author Messages

Anonymous





Posts:


--
10/14/2012 9:17 PM
    Hi, our Grade 6 class has the following question, "When will the sun burn out, and what will happen to it?" Thank you for taking the time to answer us! We really enjoy your Solar Week site!
    Tags: supernova, hydrogen, red giant, white dwarf, sun, burn out, nuclear fusion, helium

    Terry Kucera



    Basic Member


    Posts:328
    Basic Member


    --
    10/15/2012 5:16 AM
    Yes, one of the number one questions people have about the Sun!

    We do expect the Sun to burn out, but not for a very long time. We expect it to slowly heat up and in about 5 billion (5,000,000,000) years it will run out of the hydrogen in its core. This is the material that fuels the Sun. In the Sun's core immense pressures convert hydrogen into helium and energy in what is called nuclear fusion.

    Once the Sun runs out of hydrogen we expect it to start burning the helium that has built up in the core. Then it will expand into a red giant star - cooler, but much larger. It may even expand out to the Earth's orbit. That seems to be a bit strange that it will get bigger before it burns out, but that is what we expect.

    Eventually the red-giant Sun will loose its outer layers leaving a bright, small (about the size of Earth) white dwarf star, which will cool over billions of more years.

    Other stars that are larger than the Sun explode in supernovas, but we don't expect the Sun to do that.

    There is more about the lives of stars here:

    http://www.windows2univer...ff/tourstars_1a.html

    http://www.pbs.org/seeing.../lives-of-stars.html

    Terry
    You are not authorized to post a reply.


    Twitter Feed

    Scientist Leaderboard

    Name # of replies
    Multiverse skin is based on Greytness by Adammer