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?
Lava-sun would be more dense than a ice-sun at -1000, and water will be higher in volume at those temperatures. However, if you lower the water temperature even more, you might stand a chance
Adam Evans
Sun=Plasma
Ice wouldn't do anything. Pls go
Jaxson Harris
No, you're an idiot.
Ice would imply any material that is usually lighter than iron being frozen in solid form, all of which would be fuel for the sun.
The sun doesn't achieve its heat via literally fire, it does so because of its immense gravity fusing its fuel into heavier elements.
Doubling the sun's mass and fuel would literally only make it burn hotter.
Jaxson Cox
nothing can be colder than -273 celcius
Lucas Long
There is no such thing as "-1000° C degrees".
0° Kelvin is -273° Celsius.
Stupid Amerifag.
Robert Long
and what the fuck is an ice sun?
Nathaniel Miller
A made up impossibility. Anything as large as or larger than Jupiter generates its own heat due to large gravitational forces and friction.
Charles Cook
Or be a black hole
Jayden Hughes
Yes, there is.
Negative temperatures can exist.
Liam Reyes
But atoms stop moving so it's impossible
Lincoln Thompson
But nothing can be colder than absolute zero (0 kelvin)
> not sure if troll or just uninformed
Benjamin Reyes
Not nearly enough mass from a mere two "suns" to form a black hole. Our star is simply not big enough.
Note that is due to OP's use of the word "sun" which only applies to our star in this solar system. There would be plenty of stars elsewhere where "double" could form a black hole.
Benjamin Ross
tempurature is energy you cant have negative energy with normal matter
Brayden Morris
/thread, people are fucking retarded
Joseph Miller
k thx bye
Blake Lee
Nothing can be in thermal equilibrium colder than absolute 0, but while it's not in equilibrium it can be anything.
Scientists have made negative temperatures in labs before.
It turns out that negative temperatures are thermodynamically hotter than positive temperatures.
Caleb Morgan
Holy shit you're exceptionally moronic and uninformed
Kayden Moore
A trillion lions would win
Alexander Thomas
What would it take (in suns mass) to form a black hole?
According to this second link searching literally your post's text on Google:
"“This therefore raises the thorny question of just how massive a star has to be to collapse to form a black hole if stars over 40 times as heavy as our Sun cannot manage this feat,” concludes co-author Norbert Langer."