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What Would Happen if We Dumped ALL of Earth's Water Into the Sun

What Would Happen If We Dumped EVERY DROP OF WATER FROM THE EARTH ON THE SUN

By Johnica LopinaPublished 11 months ago 5 min read
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What Would Happen If We Dumped ALL Earth's Water on the Sun?

Can the Sun be put out? Think about what would occur if all of the Earth's oceans were dumped on it, or even if we could By adding more water, let's find out if the universe is a place filled with water. Despite differences among scientists on the operation of space that date back to antiquity, we have never questioned the reality of the Sun, the star at the center of our solar system. The Sun is big, bright, and appears to be eternal, yet that isn't really the case. The sun is actually just a typical star consisting primarily of hydrogen and helium with a little quantity of other heavy elements. Despite the fact that gravity holds everything together, the sun's life cycle will end in about We'll regret being so close to it once it starts consuming all the neighboring planets, which it will eventually do.

The star will continue to be a red giant for another billion years or more, after which it will eventually start to contract will eventually disappear, becoming a white dwarf; all that will be left is a vibrant, vivid planetary nebula. But don't panic just yet, the sun is in the middle of its life cycle. It was created around 4.5 billion years ago, and there are still about the same number of years left. Fortunately, we were born when the star was at its brightest and most stable. We'll need a bucket, but not this one, we'll need one that can hold around 326 gallons. If we can only transport one million cubic miles of water, it will be the same size as the distance between Washington and Chicago.

Find common buckets; there should be around 70 quintillion of them; this is a quantity with 18 zeros; now, if we could somehow get that many buckets, it would be time to light the fire. Oh, look at this, sun, we splashed the star with all this water and nothing happened really. People sometimes misunderstand how much larger the Sun is than our globe; in fact, it can hold more than one of them. It turns out that all the water on Earth is only a pitiful drop for the sun and created one little solar flare. Yes, the sun won't go out or even become colder; it won't even be aware that we've done anything. However, let's keep trying since we really want the sun to set for some reason. What will happen if we sprinkle just the right amount of water on it? How much is enough? Remember our quintillions of buckets? Well, we need roughly 370 octillions of them, which contains 27 zeros, making it difficult to even comprehend.

Just say that it's a lot of water, and then spray it all over the sun again. Wow, look at the steam, but the sun hasn't gone out again; instead, it said "Thank you" and suddenly grew much bigger and brighter. What's happening is that the sun isn't actually a campfire inside of candle flames, where chemical combustion takes place. When we spray water on the fire, the water absorbs the heat of the flame and cools it to the point where it However, even though we claim that the sun burns, it doesn't always cause the same reaction.

If you take four hydrogen atoms and RAM them together, you're left with an atom of helium, but when we talk about the Sun, the process is a little more complicated because when the star tries to carry out that Fusion positive protons repel each other it makes it one of the most violent and craziest reactions in the universe. There are many layers of hydrogen going deep into the sun. It would require a lot of energy and effort to somehow bring them together, but thankfully there is a mystical force in space: gravity. The sun consumes 99.8% of all the energy in the universe.

We all know that water is H2O, which is composed of hydrogen and oxygen, so this is literally fuel for the Sun. It's like attempting to put out a fire with gasoline. More importantly, the extra mass added by water is more significant than the billions of these tiny hydrogen atoms that gravity pushes together every second of every day.adding water causes the sun to eventually collapse in on itself, blow off its outer layers, and turn into a black hole. It seems like we've forgotten something—apparently water was crucial for life on Earth who would have thought now there are a ton of immobile fish and other marine creatures lying around where the ocean used to be good job guys let's press rewind because obviously our water experiment was a mistake one small solar flare sounds much better okay

we're back to our usual calm Sun but it seems like we've forgotten something—apparently water was critical for life on Earth who would have thought now there's a to The algae and corals that produce between 50 and 80 percent of the world's oxygen have also dried up. But wait, weren't they

The world's oxygen is running low, so it's time to put on some oxygen masks. How are things on dry land? I mean, everything is now just land, but you get the idea: Wow, this entire area is lit. If there were no oceans, there would be no clouds or rain, and now there are forest fires everywhere. Poor animals must flee and leave. their houses, oh my, and it's unlikely that they will be able to find another place to live. Because there won't be any living space left on the planet due to the fact that all plants will dry up quickly, the earth now resembles a vast desert. However, people have been living in deserts for thousands of years, so perhaps they will know what to do. However, since people need water in deserts, there is now complete anarchy everywhere.

Even if there are any survivors, they must fight for the last drops of water since the ocean absorbs a tremendous quantity of CO2 and the heat from the Sun, sealing their doom no matter how hard they struggle for resources. further disperse this heat over the earth, making it comfortable to dwell on yet even if we ignore the extreme heat right now, there are no clouds, and they assisted us by not allowing Our Last Hope is icebergs since we are also directly impacted by the sun's race through solar radiation.

Thank you for watching and always, like and share

ScienceClimate
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Johnica Lopina

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