Important Notice: Our web hosting provider recently started charging us for additional visits, which was unexpected. In response, we're seeking donations. Depending on the situation, we may explore different monetization options for our Community and Expert Contributors. It's crucial to provide more returns for their expertise and offer more Expert Validated Answers or AI Validated Answers. Learn more about our hosting issue here.

When the Sun becomes a supernova, is there any way the Earth can survive it?

0
Posted

When the Sun becomes a supernova, is there any way the Earth can survive it?

0

Our sun is not large enough to end its life span in super nova. Stars that meet this size requirement are usually located in distant past regieons of our universe, and have little chance of actually hitting earth because of the distance between spacetime of the two type stars. Theoretically, if one did venture close enough to blast high energy particles to insinerate her and all life she contains, it would be a very rare almost theoretically improbable given the probability of something that occurs that far in the past reaching our space time regeon earth resides in, it would be more likely to be evaporated by a gigantic sun burp, which is a natural occurance of a sun of our type star, throughtout various times of its lifespan.

Related Questions

What is your question?

*Sadly, we had to bring back ads too. Hopefully more targeted.