Assuming the ice sun was -1000℃ and the sun made of lava was 1000℃ what would happen...

Assuming the ice sun was -1000℃ and the sun made of lava was 1000℃ what would happen? Personally I think they would cancel out. What do you think

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I think you suck at science.

How can the sun thats made of ice shine. Maybe flat ice sun?

If its big enough it will start to collide and start fusion. But then it became a normal sun

Ice sun? Wtf? That's not how any of this works.

Nasa just colours these photos because otherwise it would be difficult to see anything interesting in space. A lot of space isn't that colourful or vibrant otherwise

You literally have all humanity's knowledge at your fingertips and you still play guessing game. Kill yourself, you dumb nigger.

When they combine the rapid equalization would create diamonds the hardest metal.

No idiot it would create an obsidian sun.

God I just realized that most zoomers aren't going to understand that reference.

>-1000c isnt possible
>a large enough mass with create enough heat from gravitational friction that it would still burn like the sun, but not as long
>assuming that -1000c was possible and it hit +1000c mass of equal mass and composition, they would equal out ton0 degrees c. But say a you had 100kg mass of iron at -100c and combined it with a +100c 100kg mass of aluminum, the final temp would not be 0 because of physics.

Did you just use a curse word? Mods.

Ye we can see only wave lengths. Every material has its specifict wave lenght

fuck off with your Celsius

Is obsidian made differently in Minecraft now?

Absolute zero my ass

I mean heat capacity and phase transition would give you a wet ball of rock

Zoomers don't play The Minecrafts. They play Twoweek.

Nothing. Lava sun would vaporate that fuck

You must prefer SI units, 1273 K and -727 K.

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A sun is still considered a fireball you retarded imbecile. You cant have a shiny ball of liquid nitrogen floating in space that shines with a billion lumens. There is no such thing as a -1000C blue fire burning sun. Get your science facts straight. We are talking about actual theoritical science, not fake ass star trek shit.

nice
but the star treks is real science. ifls told me so.

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> ice sun
wouldn't be a sun, it'd be a black ball of ice (depending on the mass, possibly something denser in the core)

> -1000C
No such temperature. -273.15C is the lowest you can go.

> sun made of lava
That wouldn't be a sun. It would be a ball of warm rock, or something denser depending on total mass.
> 1000C
1000C isn't a sun, it is middling-hot to cool lava.
Our Sun is about 15.6 million degrees in the core and about 5500 degrees in its atmosphere.

> what would happen
If they collided, you'd end up with an explosion from the kinetic energy of them physically hitting, followed by them settling into a ball of the combined mass, and of a type of matter dependant on the total mass.

>and of a type of matter dependant on the total mass
What's the matter? Heh.

Hemorrhoids.

-1000c is impossible
the specific heat of lava is about .84 while the specific heat of water is 4 so you can calculate the thermal transfer yourself, remember to add in the heat to convert solid water to liquid and liquid rock to solid.
the density of our sun is a little over 1g/cm^3, lava has a density over 3x that, so you need to figure the density difference into your calculations.
also, if you had something that massive, it would collapse in on itself and produce a lot of heat. a lot of atoms torn apart, a lot of radiation, and eventually you'd have something really strange but it would likely begin nuclear fusion and be an actual star.

Totally depends if the suns crash at night.