• @[email protected]
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    6221 days ago

    Fun fact: If there was air between us and the sun to carry sound, we would constantly hear it roaring at around 100dB (as loud as a jackhammer).

    • @[email protected]
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      21 days ago

      More fun facts: When the stars are right In approximately 5 billion years, the sun will awake from his slumber enter in his red giant phase and devour engulf Mercury, Venus, and possibly also the Earth.

      • @Buddahriffic
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        521 days ago

        And some previous sun(s), after growing into even larger red giants, created most of the matter you see around you in an act of such violence it likely destroyed any planets they hadn’t devoured.

        And some of what it created still contains enough rage to make the most violent creations humanity had made–up to the point when we realized we could use that to power an even more violent creation: a brief and miniature version of our slumbering sun.

      • @pressanykeynow
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        421 days ago

        It will eat Earth and at some point the heat will likely make all the planets and their satellites unsuitable for humans. There might be a possibility for life on Pluto though.

        • @FordBeeblebrox
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          521 days ago

          Pluto’s gonna get the last word after the other planets kicked him out of the planet club

          • @pressanykeynow
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            320 days ago

            Well not really, it’s not like Pluto’s mass(1/6 of our Moon) will grow much in that time. But there are evidences of water on Pluto and even suggestions of underground liquid water oceans(due to it’s core’s heat) so it may be suitable for life even now.

    • ekZeppM
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      1821 days ago

      roaring

      …or screaming

    • @Jumi
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      1421 days ago

      Another fun fact: If we could hear the sun and it would suddenly disappear we would still hear it for another 13 to 14 years.

      • @toynbee
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        1421 days ago

        Not eight minutes and twenty seconds?

        Not even an edit: I typed this then realized I was thinking of the speed of light, not sound. Sorry for doubting you.

    • Diplomjodler
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      21 days ago

      If there was air between us and the sun we would long have been burned to a crisp, though.

    • @Eheran
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      421 days ago

      How so? And at what frequency?

      • @[email protected]
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        1021 days ago

        Cause it’s basically an ongoing explosion.
        And supposedly it would sound something like a huge waterfall.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 days ago

          I can’t help but wonder what effect that would have on life. Assuming that there’s a circumstance where a form of life can somehow be exposed to the infinite roar of its benevolent tyrant - what would that do to hearing? Would life even develop hearing? I can’t imagine things like echolocation would be very useful, but I’m just some dude thinking about our eldritch sun god. Idk.

          • @toynbee
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            521 days ago

            We’d probably be safe from the “Quiet Place” monsters, at least.

          • @[email protected]
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            219 days ago

            i love the idea of hearing being a niche thing that only exists in caves sufficiently insulated from the surface, it would definitely make vision even more popular than it is as it stands

            • @[email protected]
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              217 days ago

              Yeah, I’d have to wonder if surface eyes would become stronger as a result. Think a Quiet Place monsters but instead of sensitive hearing they have eagle eyes and night vision. Scary stuff.

        • @Eheran
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          -121 days ago

          No, it is not an ongoing explosion. It is in equilibrium, an explosion is not, that is it’s defining thing. Why should it sound like water when the processes happen on far larger scales (lower frequencies)? They should almost exclusively be inaudible.

    • @[email protected]
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      321 days ago

      Do you know how loud it would be if you were right next to it, assuming it was all surrounded by air?