Your age would be no different - also, unfortunately, you would be dead.
you would still be 11 because the sun doesn't really rotate around anything. Well considering it does not matter if you are spining around something or not, I do not have time to explain time to you, so if you were 11 on earth, since gravity is 100 times greater on the sun you would be alot older on the sun. I would guess probably a ratio like 1 year on earth would be 7 years on the sun, because of the gravity is so powerful there.
Your location does not change your age. You will be the same age.
I suppose if you live where it's cold almost all the time, you think of sunny days as the essence of good times. However, between the happy new world and their present experience stood the fimbulvinter, a period of no summer, followed by the destruction of the Sun. The Golden Age gets a New Sun, which is better and warmer than the old one.
the sun is 10 billion years old in human years
The pronoun for "sun" would be "it."
the answer is that you would be about 50.45 years of age.
It's not possible to be on the sun due to its extreme temperatures, but if you mean how would age be calculated on the sun, you would not have an age in the same way as on Earth since time is not experienced in the same manner due to the sun's conditions.
Age of the Sun was created in 2002.
It gives heat and without it an ice age would come.
Third Age of the Sun was created in 2005.
Age of the Fifth Sun was created on 2010-05-17.
I would avoid prolonged sun exposure and use sun screen if you have to be outdoors for a long period of time. Even in the winter, you can still get a sun burn.
A decrease in the energy produced by the Sun. Energy from the sun provides heat so a decrease in this would lead to cooling.
SUN
Well, relatively speaking NO, since we cannot reproduce a metal that would withstand the extreme temperatures near the Sun, however if we really could build one that could withstand the temps, what would we really see? Nothing, we already know what it is, its molten lava. Would we learn the actual Suns age? No, since a part of the sun would have to die for us to learn this, we would get better age gathering solar wind.
sun ended the ice age
Considering the distance of Jupiter to the Sun, the Earth would suffer from an utter and never ending ice age, because the heat from the Sun is the major determining factor in the climate of our ecosystem.