DrDeath
DrDeath
20 / 17
8th Feb 2014
8th Feb 2014
No Description provided.
supernova bomb explosion nugget acopiedsave

Comments

  • RealisticHypernova
    RealisticHypernova
    8th Mar 2014
    @Slart 100 sun masses is when the sun becomes a red giant, and will eat up all rocky planets but Mars, and the outer planet will be quite warmed up.
  • Daniel219
    Daniel219
    9th Feb 2014
    Oh well. By the time the sun is in that stage though we'd probably be half way to the next habitable planet (hopefully with a more explosive sun lol)
  • Slartibartfast
    Slartibartfast
    9th Feb 2014
    @Daniel219 - When the sun expands to hundreds of times its current size it will engulf the inner rocky planets and fry most of the rest of the solar system; hardly an end to the entire universe. I think it is most likely that, eventually, the universe will succumb to the Second Law of Thermodynamics. All the useful energy will be turned into useless background radiation and the universe will carry on expanding, forever, in a 'heat death'.
  • Daniel219
    Daniel219
    9th Feb 2014
    @Skitz- Doesn't seem very plausible. I'm still hoping to go out with a bang when the sun explodes.
  • xXDiaboolic1217Xx
    xXDiaboolic1217Xx
    9th Feb 2014
    copied
  • Skitz
    Skitz
    9th Feb 2014
    A new way for the universe to die. Look up bubble of nothingness instability. Basically it states that later on in the future the fabric of spacetime will decay into nonexistence. This will create a bubble of nothingness that will expand faster than the speed of light and erase the entire universe. I could be wrong but that is a scary end.
  • C_D_Pro
    C_D_Pro
    9th Feb 2014
    copied
  • kovushane
    kovushane
    9th Feb 2014
    to be completly honest I have seen much better star explosions, this is alright but not all that good
  • relyk1
    relyk1
    9th Feb 2014
    but because particles in tpt dont have their own gravity (which i hope they will include someday) this is impossible to get accurate in this program
  • relyk1
    relyk1
    9th Feb 2014
    this is not scientifically accurate, a star is created when under extreme pressure and heat, hydrogen and other gasses out in space start nuclear fusion (or fission, dunno which)