So guys I've been thinking.
What happens when the outside lava on the sun solidifies like it has on earth?
Isn't it going to be dark all day and we will only have a bit of moonlight at night?
So guys I've been thinking
pretty sure there are constant reactions that generate heat, so thats probably not going to happen for billions of years
The sun is an atomic reactor run by nitrogen not lava.
it's not lava, it's gas and plasma
This
There is no lava on the sun. The sun is made entirely of gasses.
It's not lava it's magma
falling for bait.
OP says no sunlight then says there will still be moonlight.
ohh haha, i've been foiled once again!
Here is the answer to your question.
You ever see pictures of the sun and notice those black spots? That's where the lava has cooled and hardened into rock, like lava on earth. It doesn't stay though. Because rocks are solids, it's heavier than a liquid (lava) and it sinks below the lava where it turns into lava again.
It's sort of like the mantle of the earth. The magma rises to the top because heat rises, and then it cools and hardens into rock, and sinks back down to become lava again.
If it was plasma it would be green. Does it look green?
Moon makes it's own light.
It is green, i think you should go see a doctor
you might be colorblind
You know, it was a time since I was reminded diamonds was the hardest metal. Is this gonna be it's successor?
Northern and Southern lights are forms of plasma and they can be different colours
>current year
>Still posting this stupid shit
I have like eight screen shots of this being posted already. Come up with fresh pasta.
>I have like eight screen shots of this being posted already. Come up with fresh pasta.
I don't believe you. Proof.
I would, but it says image already online with a link to this thread
Fuck you. The Trumpet would call you Lyin' Faggot
Post the pic asshole
There is no moonlight. It's just reflections from the sun
but theyre technically new photons, so the light is now from the moon
It's not photons it's light