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Old August 20th 06, 08:55 PM posted to sci.astro.amateur,sci.astro,alt.astronomy,alt.astronomy.solar,uk.sci.astronomy
Radium
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Default When the sun becomes a white dwarf why will it take SO long to cool off?


Brian Tung wrote:
Radium wrote:
I've read about the sun's life cycle. Apparently, when the sun becomes
a white dwarf, it will take at least a trillion years to completely
cool off. Why such a long time?


Because at that point, the Sun will still have a lot of heat left, but
it will be radiating it much slower than it does now.

A white dwarf is the hot exposed core of the progenitor star. As such,
it contains most of the heat that was in the star at the time that it
died. But the white dwarf radiates heat much slower than it did when
the star was alive, simply because its surface area is so much smaller.

The Sun as a white dwarf will be, let's say, 100 times smaller (by
diameter) than it is now, meaning it will be 10,000 times smaller by
area. To be sure, it will initially be quite hot, perhaps four times
hotter (in kelvins) than it is now, so it'll radiate tens of times more
energy per unit area than it does now. Still, that means that its
overall rate of radiation (and therefore rate of cooling) will be
several hundreds of times slower than it is now.

That factor will only increase as the Sun cools down, and the rate at
which it radiates off into space slows down. It will approach the cold
of interstellar space only very slowly at the end.

--
Brian Tung
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When the sun become a black dwarf, will it ever get a chance to cool to
around 70 Fahrenheit? Or will it likely form another star before?