The earth has roughly 5 billion years left before the farthest limit of its life as a planet as far as we can project currently; that is roughly the time that the sun will expand into a red giant [it is not massive enough to become a supernova] and either totally destroy the earth physically, or at least render a hopelessly barren and burned out cinder. Well before that time, probably within the next one billion years, the slowly increasing temperature of the sun will cause the earth to grow hotter and hotter, and the earth will lose all of its water. If we have not managed to figure out a way to survive post-earth by then, it will be the complete end of earth-based human life.
Heres a successful real answer water on earth will always exist water evaporates and rain is everywhere in every state to country and it will never stop the cycle happy to help >.> Look At Me Now <.<
Since the beginning of man. It's always been one of the necessary components of all life on Earth.
forever it was on earth when the earth was made
It will continue as long as there is an atmosphere.
The lithosphere is the rocky outer layer of any rocky planet, a term derived from the greek for rocky sphere. The lithosphere is important to humans, as it sheilds us, and all other organisms on Earth, from the immense heat of the Earth's inner core. The consequence of its formation is that water can exist in its liquid form, allowing for the carbon-based life forms that exist today. However, the lisophere is also important for the stability of the Earth. The inner layers of the Earth are subjected to pressure by the lisophere as it is affected by gravity, forcing the innermost elements into the Earth's radioactive core, continuing the nuclear fusion that maintains the planet's constant state of balance. Finally, due to the Earth's formation by the congregation of elements from a long-passed supernova explosion, a number of essential heavy elements, such as carbon, iron, etc. had become trapped in the lithosphere as they settled in the Earth's upper layers as it cooled. It is these elements that allow and comprise much of what exists on the surface today.
Planet Earth has existed about as long as the Solar System - something like 4.6 billion years. For the future, it is harder to know how long it will last. In a few hundred million years, it is expected to get too hot for life to exist on planet Earth, but the planet will continue existing. In 4 or 5 billion years, Earth will ultimately be swallowed up by the expanding Sun.
Life has been on this planet for over three billion years. Life on Earth will continue after mankind's reign is over.
As long as eternity
In about 5 billion years, the Sun is expected to be huge; it may, or may not, engulf Earth. Way before that, it will be much too hot on Earth for life to continue existing.
Water will exist on earth forever because the water cycle gives a continuous supply of water.
Life on earth could not exist without fungi. The Fungi Kingdom has been on earth since about 1,500 million years ago.
In about 5 billion years, the Sun is expected to be huge; it may, or may not, engulf Earth. Way before that, it will be much too hot on Earth for life to continue existing.
maybe for along time
It will be impossible for life to exist without the sun. In fact, even before the sun totally disappears, life on earth will be gone. Check this website : http://www.dlr.de/en/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-1/86_read-18304/
Duck
If the people keep invest regularly than it would be continue unless not.
Static Variables are created when the class is loaded and continue to exist as long as the class is loaded/present in the JVM