Never. A star must be about 10 times the mass of the sun or more to go supernova.
The Sun won't go supernova (it isn't massive enough) so the question has no real answer!
White Dwarf, Sun, Red Giant, Supernova
Oh, sure. The Sun is a Supernova. That's why we're all sitting here burning to death.
A supernova is much larger and brighter than a regular, stable star like our sun. During a supernova event, the star can briefly outshine an entire galaxy before fading away. The process of a supernova represents the violent death of a massive star.
Supernova
a supernova
The sun is not big enough to supernova. It's not even big enough to nova. The fate of the sun is a Red giant, a white dwarf then a black dwarf. Therefore we don't need to worry about the sun becoming a supernova. We need to worry about the sun expand to the size where it touches Jupiter.
Yes by a large factor. A supernova can be 10 light years across. Our Sun is a mere 4.6 light seconds across
The Sun is not massive enough to undergo a supernova explosion. A supernova occurs when a massive star runs out of fuel, collapses under its own gravity, and then explodes. The Sun is not massive enough to go through this process and will instead eventually evolve into a red giant and then into a white dwarf.
A Supernova.
no. it is not large enough.
Our Sun is currently a main sequence star. It is not a supernova, as supernovae are massive explosions that occur at the end of a star's life cycle, and it is not a white dwarf, which is a type of star that has exhausted its nuclear fuel and collapsed to a very dense state.