/u/Iguessilltryit's posts in /r/askscience
Hypothetically speaking would the earth be able to last forever as we know it? ie. Hot core, liquid water etc. Assuming all external conditions were perfect such as no meteor collisions, no imminent supernova of the sun, no continuous universal expansion causing the earth to freeze etc.
1546 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
9 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
Hypothetically speaking would the earth be able to last forever as we know it, ie. Hot core, liquid water etc. Assuming all external conditions were perfect such as no meteor collisions, no imminent supernova of the host star etc.
1 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
What is the true earth to water ratio taking into account all of earth's many layers and the fact that water exist beneath earths surface?
1 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
If all matter was taken out of the universe except for a ball of matter placed at a single point in space, would this matter just float at that one point undisturbed forever or are there forces that could act on this matter to cause movement of any fashion ie expansion, collapsing in on itself, etc?
1 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
Is it possible for a gas planet like Jupiter to become a "dead planet" like mars or will it be continuously active due its makeup?
1 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
Can someone thoroughly explain the difference between a void and a black hole? Also why isn't a void just thought to be dark matter?
1 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list
1 upvotes
Mark as read: Add to a list