View Single Post
  #6  
Old May 5th 19, 08:24 PM posted to alt.astronomy
palsing[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,068
Default The real state of the Climate, 2018

On Sunday, May 5, 2019 at 9:44:45 AM UTC-7, Hägar wrote:
"palsing" wrote in message
...

Actually, I did pay attention in school, and you have proven once again that
you did not...

https://www.windows2universe.org/sun/fate.html

... you are only 100% wrong in saying that the Sun will die in 10 billion
years.

It's all about the evidence, and your fringe scientist Humlum doesn't have
any...


*** You pathetic jerkoff. In 5 Billion years the Hydrogen of the Sun will
be exhausted and the Helium cycle will begin, all the way up to the Iron
cycle, where it comes to a screeching halt. My point was that a gradual
rise in Earth's temperature is the norm, rather than the exception,
especially the man-made version you brainwashed idiots so love to glom onto.
The Red Giant Sun could happen in 5 Billion years. The full Red Giant state
will occur 8 to 10 Billion years down the road, followed by the White Dwarf
stage.


Hagar, you ignorant slut. You claimed that "in 10 Billion years the Earth will be burned to a crisp by the Red Giant called Sun."

All my point is that the Earth will be burned to a crisp a lot sooner than that, more like about 5 billion years. Should this be your word against mine? No, I don't think so, we both rely on the evidence of others to make our case.

Here is some evidence to support my position...

http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/.../vistas97.html

"T=8 Gyr (3.5 Gyr from today):

Sun will be 40% brighter than today.
Extra solar energy results in a Runaway Greenhouse Effect
The oceans will evaporate into space, and conditions on the Earth will be like those on Venus today. Such conditions will probably mean the end of all forms of terrestrial life."

That sounds pretty much like "burned to a crisp" to me... here is another....

https://www.universetoday.com/18847/life-of-the-sun/

"In 3.5 billion years from now, the Sun will be 40% brighter than it is right now. This increase will cause the oceans to boil, the ice caps to permanently melt, and all water vapor in the atmosphere to be lost to space. Under these conditions, life as we know it will be unable to survive anywhere on the surface."

Your 10 billion year claim is looking shaky...how about this, from NASA...

https://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/istp/...son/facts.html

"... This leaves the Sun's life expectancy to 5 billion more years, at which time, the Sun's elements will "swell" up, swallow Earth, and eventually die off into a small white dwarf..."