Unlikely. Though, no one can truly know for sure.
Our Sun did not exist till about five billion years ago.
No. Earth cannot explode. Our planet will likely remain intact for about 5 billion years. At that point the sun will expand and probably consume Earth.
Its diameter is about 6 astronomical units, or 500 million miles, that is about 600 times the Sun's diameter. It is big and unstable, it is only 10 million years old and will probably explode as a supernova in the next million years.
If the Sun were to explode billions of years from now, it would wipe out the entire Solar System, planets and all. The Sun may never explode, however, due to its size.
The largest star known, Eta Carinae, has about 150 times the Sun's mass but it is only 3 million years old and likely to explode in less than a million years so is unstable and short-lived compared to other stars.
well it might and it might not only god knows in 6 million years the sun will explode so i dont know
It is predicted that the sun will not actually explode, but rather expand into a red giant and eventually shed its outer layers, forming a planetary nebula. This process will occur in approximately 5 billion years.
The sun will not explode. It will eventually go through a phase where it expands into a red giant and then shed its outer layers to become a white dwarf. This process will happen in about 5 billion years.
Our Sun isn't calculated to have enough mass to explode as a supernova, but in a little over five billion years it will swell up in size as a red giant and consume the inner planets, possibly large enough to include Earth.
the sun spots like black little spots on the sun that explode every 11 years
The sun was roughly 4.6 billion years old a million years ago. The margin for error on the estimated age of the sun is more than a million years.
The Sun will not explode.In about 4.5 billion years, our Sun will slowly cool and turn into a red giant, it's outer envelope will almost touch the Earth.After about another million years, it will shed it's outer envelope, causing a planetary nebula What is left of our Sun, is a white dwarf about the size of the Earth, which will slowly radiate it's remaining heat into space for billion and billions of years.