Message from @✧Mike Flatbird (Mike Blackbird)✧
Discord ID: 567322192866574353
and, neither do any of your Sci-Fi PRIESTS
❌
no, u dont. and--neither do they \
you can theorize and hypothesize but
--nice tlkn to u .. lol.......
i gtg 👋 ..
"What is the Sun made of?
The Sun is a huge, glowing sphere of hot gas. Most of this gas is hydrogen (about 70%) and helium (about 28%). Carbon, nitrogen and oxygen make up 1.5% and the other 0.5% is made up of small amounts of many other elements such as neon, iron, silicon, magnesium and sulfur. The Sun shines because it is turning hydrogen into helium via the process of nuclear fusion in its extremely hot core. "
A similar composition to Jupiter iirc
So uh
We do know
: /
Nuclear fusion does exist. Or are you going to deny the existence of that too? It generates extreme amounts of heat and light which is why the sun glows
The fusion is caused by the extreme density of the star itself
Density is a product of gravity, by the way.
@Siriusly <:lul:484994724118134784>
Go on
Disprove it if i'm so stupid.
yep , and
gravity" robs "weight" of its menaing 👌 okie dokie lmao at u
--you are..
STEWPIT
Gravity causes weight
derp
Because weight is just gravity working between to bodies
Disprove me i'd love to see you try
_yawns_
Siri is unfortunately right, we can decipher the components of our sun due to it's blackbody radiation from color, however just because we know what the sun is made out of we can't say how far away it is or how big it is since we can't directly observe those things
<:lul:484994724118134784>
u funnybirds u
So once again
If we know what the sun is made of how does it not burn the atmosphere if it's inside it? Size wouldn't be an issue if you've ever seen nuclear fusion before.
there's lesssss "atmosphere" in/at HIGHER >> Altitudess
. 🍼 🤤
Still enough heat to burn the lower altitudes
The sun is still *inside* the dome
Because we don't know the size of the sun or the distance of the sun, all those things are important to whether or not it would burn us.
I'm not talking about burning the surface
That's another matter entirely
And since clearly it doesn't, we can at least conclude that the sun is a rather small object
The sun has existed as long as earth has, don't you think something that incredibly bright and hot would have done some amount of damage if it were inside of an atmosphere?
With oxygen, nitrogen, helium, and other flammable gases?
Lightning strikes are literally plasma from electrical buildup alone and they can be devastating to their surroundings, while the return stroke is hotter than the sun they only stick around for a fraction of a fraction of a second, the sun's been around for much longer.
Clearly it didn't, which must mean that the sun isn't as "powerful" and huge as we're told. Furthermore, we can't know for sure how old the sun is, so your first sentence is an assumption
If the sun hasn't existed as long as the earth