According to research published in the scientific journal Nature Astronomy, the Sun, which increases in temperature markedly every billion years, will indeed melt into a planetary nebula, like it was previously assumed.
This image illustrates the observable universe on an increasingly compact scale, with the Earth & Sun at the center surrounded by our Solar System, nearby stars, nearby galaxies, distant galaxies, filaments of early matter & the cosmic microwave background https://t.co/a394GhcB45 pic.twitter.com/PWoVt8sCuD
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) 8 мая 2018 г.
Before that, however, the aging star is forecast to turn into a red giant, with the core of it crumpling and shrinking, while its outer layers will exponentially grow to engulf our planet along the way, if it hasn’t ceased to exist by then. The latter is a highly realistic scenario, since the 10 percent growth in brightness that the Sun witnesses every billion years immediately corresponds to oceans, eventually, evaporating at a frightening speed, as well as Earth's surface overheating.
Separately, an international team of astronomers has used top-notch computer modelling techniques to determine that our Sun's fate will mirror that of 90 percent of other stars: it will supposedly shrink down from a red giant to become a white dwarf and subsequently end up as a planetary nebula, something that humans stand little chance of witnessing.
Long after we are gone and our sun has become a white dwarf there is still a whole bunch of solar debris that will be around. Looks like astronomers have an idea of what the outcome will be. https://t.co/Arudu8whQp
— EcoCentricNow LLC (@ecocentricnow) 7 мая 2018 г.
"When a star dies it ejects a mass of gas and dust — known as its envelope — into space. The envelope can be as much as half the star's mass. This reveals the star's core, which by this point in the star's life is running out of fuel, eventually turning off and before finally dying," commented astrophysicist Albert Zijlstra from the University of Manchester in the UK, one of the authors of the new study.
Interestingly, the envelope at the time shines bright enough to make the dying star observable, although not for long – for maximum 10,000 years, which is quite brief from the standpoint of astronomy. The commonly visible Nebulae, which were called 'planetary' long ago due to its resemblance in shape to planets, include the Helix Nebula, the Cat's Eye Nebula, the Ring Nebula and the Bubble Nebula.
READ MORE: NASA's Hubble Telescope Captures Shocking Moment When a Sun-like Star Explodes
Our Sun, which is technically known as a yellow dwarf, is 4.6 billion years old. While it may last another 10 billion years, red dwarfs such as the heart of the seven-planet Trappist-1 system, discovered in February 2017, burn at lower temperatures and can last for trillions of years.