What would happen if a sun made of ice would collide with a normal, lava-made sun?
Both suns would be the same size and ice-made sun's temperature would be -1000 degrees of celsius and normal sun's temperature +1000 degrees of celsius.
Would their combined effects cancel each other out so that instead there would be only empty space or one 0-degree sun?
Ethan Torres
Does it matter that the suns aren't made of lava?
Henry Bennett
I think we'd get season 2 of firefly
Jeremiah Howard
Can't go below absolute zero -273 Celcius
David Davis
> -1000*C
Jacob Taylor
>lava-made sun Kill yourself. The surface temperature of the sun is 6000 degrees Kelvin, and its core temperature is even hotter. A massive ice-star would only add to fhe Sun's mass, and the ice breaks down into hydrogen. Dumb bitch.
Jonathan Cooper
Yes.
John Diaz
No such thing as 'Lava Suns' ad 'Ice Suns'. Also if they were real, the 'Ice sun' would just vanish if it got remotely near the 'Lava sun' as the temperature is just too great. This is physically impossible as they don't exist and OP is a faggot. Thread over let's move on.
Matthew Torres
dookies...
Josiah Campbell
What if we ignore the word "sun" and think of what if a lava planet hit an ice planet
I think the lava would cool into rock, and get pushed in and the ice would evaporate, eventually the two masses would combine and the whole thing would be lava again because of the pressure
Jaxon Robinson
Hello, newfriends :^)
William Campbell
Ill give you a demonstration. Now lava will just be an example, as the sun isn't made of lava. Take a pint of lava. Add a cup of ice to it. Slam your hand into it. Is it still hot, or is it cold, or 0 degrees. That's what would happen.
Nathaniel Morales
Are you legitimately Autistic?
Caleb Gomez
-1000°C? Do your science homework.
Connor Jones
Depends, do they collide at night?
Isaac Miller
So water has a specific heat capacity of 4.184? Joules per gram. I'm thinking stone has a lower specific heat but not by much so i would say end result is net cold
Robert Jenkins
There is no sun at night, retard.
And to answer OP, the ice sun would win, because it is solid, and lava is liquid.
Jose Evans
>normal, lava-made sun > -1000 degrees of celsius
Great bait bro
Charles Harris
Exactly, so the suns just pass through each other without interacting if they were to collide during the night since they aren't actually there.
Landon Gonzalez
Whos is the one getting trolled here? Are there actually people who have not seen this copypasta? Is everybody just pretending to see it for the first time in order to troll OP? And is he playing along, too? How many layers are there?