is the sun on fire?
>>8013121
no
the sun's energy release is due to nuclear rather than chemical reactions (fusion, not oxidation)
>>8013132
No it isn't.
>>8013121
Not if you clash it with a sun made of iceh
>>8013433
You think the sun is oxidizing like a regular fire?
Sometimes I wish /sci/ had any sort of moderation.
>>8013478
What happens if a sun made of lava collides with a sun made of ice?
>>8013496
Dark matter
>>8013496
uhh the lava sun would melt the ice sun, and everyone knows that when you collide water and lava you get stone.
so you end up with a stone sun, with an obsidian core.
>>8013121
Only during the day.
>>8013549
What happens when a sun made of dark matter collides with a sun made of light matter, lets say the dark matter sun is -1000 Lumens and the light matter sun is +1000 Lumens
what does the sun taste like?
>>8013738
It's red and hot so probably like a chili pepper
Is it possible to land on the sun if you had a spacecraft that was unmeltable?
>>8013483
Absolutely. It would explode if it was nuclear fusion.
>>8013744
It's not being meltable that is an issue because without oxygen there is no medium for which heat can travel, the problem is that everything is flammable at a certain temperature
>>8013754
what if your spacecraft was made out of a material that melts at a temperature higher than the temperature of the surface of the sun. ??
>>8013764
That would would work in theory but that would need a spaceship made of diamond or this new element they discovered called graphene and both would be incredibly expensive to build
Is that you /b/?
>>8013496
You forgot the second part of the question:
"Assume the ice sun has a temperature of -1000° C and the lava sun has a temperature of 1000° C."
>>8013738
salty milk and coins
Theoretically is there even a way for us to break out of our event horizon?
>>8013753
This better be bate
>>8013753
The sun is literally a giant explosion though