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  2. Future of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Future_of_Earth

    In such a scenario, the oceans would freeze solid within several million years, leaving only a few pockets of liquid water about 14 km (9 mi) underground. There is a remote chance that Earth will instead be captured by a passing binary star system, allowing the planet's biosphere to remain intact. The odds of this happening are about 1 in 3 ...

  3. Formation and evolution of the Solar System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formation_and_evolution_of...

    In the long term, the greatest changes in the Solar System will come from changes in the Sun itself as it ages. As the Sun burns through its hydrogen fuel supply, it gets hotter and burns the remaining fuel even faster. As a result, the Sun is growing brighter at a rate of ten percent every 1.1 billion years. [117]

  4. Burning plasma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning_plasma

    The Sun is a burning plasma that has reached fusion ignition, meaning the Sun's plasma temperature is maintained solely by energy released from fusion. The Sun has been burning hydrogen for 4.5 billion years and is about halfway through its life cycle.

  5. Extraterrestrial liquid water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_liquid_water

    Currently, the only known water on Venus is in the form of a tiny amount of atmospheric vapor (20 ppm). [91] [92] Hydrogen, a component of water, is still being lost to space as detected by ESA's Venus Express spacecraft. [90]

  6. Faint young Sun paradox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faint_young_Sun_paradox

    The faint young Sun paradox or faint young Sun problem describes the apparent contradiction between observations of liquid water early in Earth's history and the astrophysical expectation that the Sun's output would have been only 70 percent as intense during that epoch as it is during the modern epoch. [1]

  7. Solar core - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_core

    The core contains 34% of the Sun's mass, but only 3% of the Sun's volume, and it generates 99% of the fusion power of the Sun. There are two distinct reactions in which four hydrogen nuclei may eventually result in one helium nucleus: the proton–proton chain reaction – which is responsible for most of the Sun's released energy – and the ...

  8. Newly-released photos capture the sun in highest resolution ...

    www.aol.com/newly-released-photos-capture-sun...

    The European Space Agency released four stunning images last week that show the sun in all its fiery glory. The images, obtained in March 2023 by the ESA's Solar Orbiter, represent what the agency ...

  9. Sun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun

    The Sun is the star at the center of the Solar System.It is a massive, nearly perfect sphere of hot plasma, heated to incandescence by nuclear fusion reactions in its core, radiating the energy from its surface mainly as visible light and infrared radiation with 10% at ultraviolet energies.