Did astronomers just lengthen the expected life of the Sun by 5 Gy?

In summary: The planetary nebula theory is that the ejected elements will make a “ghostly ring” that will be easily seen by aliens.The Sun will become a red giant in about 6.4 billion years and then will become a white dwarf in 7.1 billion years. The Sun will have a total lifetime of 12.4 billion years.
  • #1
swampwiz
571
83
I had always thought that the Sun was about midway through its regular lifetime (i.e., before it becomes a red giant), but this article seems to say that instead of having another 5 Gy until then, it will be another 10 Gy.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/scientists-sun-apos-death-even-164400014.html

Either that or the author is clueless.
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #2
The correct numbers:

6.4 billion years from now the Sun's core runs out of hydrogen and so the Sun leaves the main sequence.
7.1 billion years from now it becomes a red giant.
7.8 billion years from now it becomes a white dwarf.

The Sun's total lifetime from birth to white dwarfdom is 12.4 billion years. The frequently cited 10-billion number is just a round number, and I wish it would go away.

Reference:

Our Sun. III. Present and Future. I.-Juliana Sackmann, Arnold I. Boothroyd, and Kathleen E. Kraemer. Astrophysical Journal, 418, 457.
 
  • Like
Likes berkeman
  • #3
What's more, that article is not about any new discoveries about the future age of the Sun, nor even any discoveries about what will happen to the Sun. It has long been expected that the Sun would eject a significant fraction of its mass! All the article is about is whether or not what gets ejected will be visible by distant aliens as a "ghostly ring," or if it will be too dim to see. As often happens, whoever wrote the pop sci article completely missed the point of the research! There has been a recent theory that only stars with binary companions render their planetary nebulae visible by shepherding the mass into structures that are more easily viewed (and make quite pretty shapes). This research seems to suggest that although the shape of our Sun's planetary nebula won't be quite as pretty, it might still be rather visible. It's all about what it looks like, there are no new claims about what will happen or how long it will take. Why does every pop sci article have to claim that every new paper is some completely new paradigm, it must make the casual reader think astronomers are in a constant state of shock.
 
  • #4
swampwiz said:
I had always thought that the Sun was about midway through its regular lifetime (i.e., before it becomes a red giant), but this article seems to say that instead of having another 5 Gy until then, it will be another 10 Gy.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/scientists-sun-apos-death-even-164400014.html

Either that or the author is clueless.
I think the author must have confused the sun's total main sequence lifetime, for the time the sun has left before it leaves the main sequence.
 
  • #5
alantheastronomer said:
I think the author must have confused the sun's total main sequence lifetime, for the time the sun has left before it leaves the main sequence.
Much more likely the author just wasn't really paying attention and wrote something off in a hurry. That happens a LOT with science popularization.

That is, he may in fact have had the confusion you attribute to him but not as confusion the way most us think of it but rather, he really didn't CARE. He saw some numbers and figured out how he could use them and wrote it off and ... all good to go, on to the next article (where he will do the same thing), let's just keep the pen moving.
 
  • Like
Likes Tom.G
  • #6
The original paper had nothing to do with the sun. They looked at planetary nebula. They made models that include 10 billion year old systems. The model includes stars with 1 solar mass. The inverse article re-posted on yahoo has other problems too.

In about 10 billion years, the sun’s core will lose massive amounts of hydrogen and helium, turning it into a red giant star.
The core will have lots of helium. The core will not have lost mass except mass lost as energy). The helium burns after the red giant stage. Shell hydrogen burning reignites in the AGB stage. The AGB stage ejects the elements that become a planetary nebula. The astronomy paper used oxygen III ions.
 

1. What is the expected life of the Sun?

The expected life of the Sun is approximately 10 billion years.

2. How did astronomers determine the expected life of the Sun?

Astronomers use mathematical models and observations of other stars to estimate the life expectancy of the Sun.

3. What does it mean to "lengthen" the expected life of the Sun?

When astronomers say they have "lengthened" the expected life of the Sun, it means they have revised their previous estimate of how long the Sun will continue to burn and produce energy.

4. What factors can affect the expected life of the Sun?

The expected life of the Sun can be affected by various factors such as its mass, composition, and nuclear reactions happening in its core.

5. How does the 5 Gy extension in the Sun's expected life impact Earth?

The extension of the Sun's expected life by 5 Gy does not have a significant impact on Earth, as it is a relatively small increase in the grand scale of the Sun's lifetime. However, it does give scientists more time to study and understand the processes happening in our Sun.

Similar threads

  • Sci-Fi Writing and World Building
Replies
21
Views
1K
Replies
15
Views
6K
  • Sci-Fi Writing and World Building
Replies
15
Views
3K
Replies
4
Views
5K
  • Sci-Fi Writing and World Building
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Earth Sciences
Replies
16
Views
4K
  • General Discussion
Replies
29
Views
9K
  • MATLAB, Maple, Mathematica, LaTeX
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • MATLAB, Maple, Mathematica, LaTeX
Replies
5
Views
3K
Back
Top