It will collapse shrinking into an uncontrollable dense mass, the size of nearly a car. Then violently exploded destroying our entire solar system and possibly forming a black hole. Our suns deadline is approximately 9 billion years, so don't worry about it :).
~Bob a 15 year old African American that goes to a really good high school.
Yes, the Sun does lose energy as it shines through the process of nuclear fusion in its core. This energy loss is continuously replenished by converting mass into energy at an incredible rate, maintaining the Sun's brightness and heat.
the sun gives off energy
The energy from the Sun is solar energy.
Energy from the sun is called solar energy. The term solar energy includes both the heat and the radiant light we get from the sun.
Earth loses heat energy to outer space mainly by radiation. This process involves the transfer of energy in the form of electromagnetic waves, such as infrared radiation. These waves move through the vacuum of space and carry away thermal energy from the Earth's surface and atmosphere.
photons
secret
The sun is a collection of hydrogen and helium. Two hydrogen slam into each other, losing mass, and producing energy and helium. And so, as energy is produced from the sun, the sun loses mass-the sun will be lost after a time. The sun is merely an energy-producing object, not an energy and definitely not the supreme energy.
the sun loses nergy by emitting light duhhhh breanna Katrice smith
Yes, the Sun does lose energy as it shines through the process of nuclear fusion in its core. This energy loss is continuously replenished by converting mass into energy at an incredible rate, maintaining the Sun's brightness and heat.
As stars grow older, they lose energy. The sun is growing older and it is losing hydrogen and helium (the gases on the outer region). When the sun loses all of its energy it explodes. It then becomes a black dwarf.
When a heat source loses energy, the energy is transferred to the surroundings in the form of heat.
Solar energy is often referred to as one-way traffic because it flows from the sun to Earth, but cannot be sent back. Once it reaches Earth, solar energy can be converted into electricity for various applications, but it cannot be redirected back to the sun.
The Earth continuously loses energy to space in the form of infrared radiation, regardless of whether it is day or night. During the day, the Earth receives more energy from the Sun than it loses to space, resulting in a net gain of energy. At night, when there is no sunlight to offset the energy loss, the Earth's surface cools down as it radiates heat into space.
When a metal atom loses an electron, it loses energy. This energy corresponds to the difference in energy levels between the electron's initial position and its final position outside the atom.
Sun hit the earth, plants use sun's energy to create sugar from organic compounds. Plants lose heat to the environment. Primary consumers eat the plants, and get energy from them, also loses heat to the environment. Secondary consumers eat the primary consumers, gain energy but also loses heat to the environment. Plants and consumers died and decompose, their body become nutrients for plants and the cycle start all over.
Mercury is the planet closest to the sun.