Hey guys I need help with my science project. Hypothetically, what would happen if a sun made of ice (with a surface temp of -1000°C) collided with a sun made of lava (with a surface temp of 1000°C)?
Personally I think they would cancel each other out and that's what I wrote on, but I'd love to hear your thoughts on this.
youre an idiot. go throw ice water, almost freezing on a blazing bed of coals. please. preferably a grill or other small enclosed place.
Caleb Clark
No it would just leave a sun made of water and flood space
Daniel Ramirez
It would get hotter because a star is hot from it's own mass being compressed by the gravity of said mass. Double the mass and gravity and it gets hotter.
Hudson Adams
The fucked up thing is it would be smaller too because water expands when it's ice doe. But even more fucked up, space is really cold so even so it would freeze immediately into a sun of ice again, considering of course there is no other sun near by, of course. Honestly we need more information
Leo Perez
There would be no survivors
Charles Torres
Are you retarded, lava is molten rock that wouldn't even be a sun.
Kayden Campbell
Not what the OP was talking about, but ok lol
Joseph Kelly
2 Mayan gods sacrificed themselves to become a new sun. the problem though, was that they had each become a sun and the world was way too bright to see. One god said,”I got this!” He then threw a nearby rabbit at one of the suns so hard that the sun’s light dimmed and became the moon with mark of a rabbit forever etch to its face. Gods are fucking dumb
Dylan Sanchez
>sun made of ice
/thread
James Watson
That ice would effectively be fuel for the sun.
Carter White
The sun is different than a bed of coals, as it burns gasses and liquid metals fucktard. If the two collided they would cancel each other out. Whats -1 +1.
Liam Rogers
Turns out he is retarded
Thomas Cox
The sun doesn't burn anything you fucktard. It fuses Hydrogen into Helium and other assorted light stuff on the table of elements.
Tyler Sullivan
What exactly do you mean by cancel out though, the water needs to go somewhere it doesn't just dissapear? Are we talking a new kind of sun, a water sun when the heat gets absorbed by the ice? Or a steam sun because gravity will keep the hot steam from being expulsed into space? Then again, the outside is in contact with cold space like I pointed out here The Implications are fascinating
Cameron Cruz
>go out side >get sunburn >the sun doesn't burn anything Yea I think I'll believe my skin over your period table faggot
Thomas Fisher
> a sun made of ice (with a surface temp of -1000°C) > a surface temp of -1000°C > -1000°C it would take a -1000°C sun to prevent my brain from melting after reading OPs retarded post
Kevin Nguyen
personally, i think that the ice sun would melt while the lava sun may start to harden a little
Thee things: 1) It's impossible for anything to reach -1000 degrees c because absolute zero is -273 degrees c. There is to temperature colder than that. 2) Have you ever rapidly cooled something hot? It often breaks. There would be some kind of exothermic reaction. 3) Why the fuck are you asking /b about a science project? IT'S FUCKING /B!
Jaxson Parker
how many minutes per hour are they traveling?
Hudson Walker
At least seven
Wyatt Allen
Obviously OP is lying and the question is impossible to begin with. But none of the comments indicate anyone not understanding this. Mostly just quality comments except for this one ofc. Wonder which subset of Yas Forums for some reason chose to reply in this thread. Wonder if somehow all the sad pol people could be filtered out somehow.
Sorry, continue.
Chase Wood
>I'd love to hear your thoughts on this. I think you're a moron for posting this stupid pasta.
Matthew Reed
It would be physically impossible for a star to be made of either of these compounds since the heat energy generated by the immense crushing force of gravity destabilizes the atoms in stars.
If you theoretically popped two star-sized balls of H2O and (presumably) rock & metal into space instantaneously, they would both instantly explode because the atoms aren't stable enough to hold up against gravity.
Only stars made up of hydrogen, helium, carbon, etc down to iron are stable enough to generate fusion in their cores to sustain themselves against gravity. Once a star reaches iron, it an heroes.
John Ramirez
It would turn into a Black Hole bigger than your mum's.
considering that -1000C is in the negative kelvin range, and we can't quite reach absolute zero kelvin, yeah, impossible
Hunter Torres
obviously the ice would melt and be water and then it would make a big sun made of obsidian when the water and lava touch
Connor Reyes
Ice is cold retard
Elijah Martinez
/thread
Nathaniel Nelson
not all of it is. do some research into ice 2, or above. you can create hot ice by compressing water so much that it forms a solid structure, even at a high temperature.