We believe so; in fact it has been swelling ever since it ignited as a star.
Eventually it should become a red giant a hundred times bigger than it is now.
swell up due to osmosis, as water will move from an area of higher concentration (outside the cells) to an area of lower concentration (inside the cells), causing them to expand. This can eventually lead to the cells bursting.
Yes and no -- the sun will destroy the earth during before the earth's core will get the chance to cool down completely. If the Earth was further away from the sun so it could survive the Sun's death, then yes, it will cool down completely. Just like the Moon and Mars already did.
Tar melts in the sun because it is made up of a mixture of hydrocarbons that have low melting points. When exposed to the heat of the sun, the temperature of the tar increases, causing it to soften and eventually melt.
hemolysis
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.
Because its hot and they will eventually explode.
Yes, eventually the sun will burn out. Current estimates suggest this won't happen for another 5 billion years. When it does, the sun will swell into a red giant, consuming Mercury and Venus, before eventually shrinking into a white dwarf.
The sun will eventually exhaust its nuclear fuel and swell into a red giant, engulfing the inner planets, including Earth. It will then shed its outer layers to form a planetary nebula, leaving behind a slowly cooling remnant called a white dwarf.
yes, eventually your stomach will start to swell up, and eventually die, this could take 1 hour to 2 hours.
A yellow star. The Sun is definitely not a red giant; if it were to swell to the size of a red giant (like Antares, for example), our Earth would end up inside the Sun.
white dwarf star
After pollination, the ovary(s) (technically it's the ovules inside the ovary(s) that swell. This eventually forms the fruit and it's seeds.
swell up due to osmosis, as water will move from an area of higher concentration (outside the cells) to an area of lower concentration (inside the cells), causing them to expand. This can eventually lead to the cells bursting.
Yes, sun exposure can cause lips to swell due to a condition known as sunburned lips. The skin on the lips is particularly sensitive to sun damage, which can result in inflammation, redness, and swelling. It is important to protect your lips with sunscreen or lip balm with sun protection to prevent this.
A high wave is called a "swell" when it is traveling across the ocean without breaking. If the swell gets steeper and eventually breaks, it is then called a "wave."
The energy radiated by the Sun comes from nuclear fusiondeep in its core. Main sequence stars like the Sun fuse hydrogen into helium until they exhaust their supply, over billions of years. Eventually they may swell into red giant stars that fuse helium into carbon.
Because they absorb the water they're in - which makes them swell up.