Editing Talk:2062: Barnard's Star

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Faster comunication than photons could be possible with plasma entanglement but I'm still skeptical as to whether or not stars are big giant sentient brains. Why is it traveling so fast I wonder... a remnant of some previous galactic merger?
 
Faster comunication than photons could be possible with plasma entanglement but I'm still skeptical as to whether or not stars are big giant sentient brains. Why is it traveling so fast I wonder... a remnant of some previous galactic merger?
  
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Two points.  First, a star called Gliese 710 will pass through the Solar System in about 1.3 million years.  Predictions of how close it will come vary, but seem to cluster around 0.3 lighyears (ly) and 0.05 ly.  Both estimates  mean the star will pass through the Oort cloud.  There is even a small chance it will pass just outside the Kuiper belt.  This star is informally called "Uncle Jimbo's Star" because it's coming right at us.  Second, your basic star-shaped star is an easy thing to study in detail and an easy thing to model.  The sun has a radiative core; it cannot add fresh fuel.  As a result, it burns up about 10% of its hydrogen and goes out.  Barnard's star is convective throughout, so it constantly mixes fresh hydrogen into its core.  As a result, Barnard's star will consume 50 - 80 % of its hydrogen before going out.  The reacting masses of the Sun and Barnard's star are almost the same. Since the bolometric luminosity of Barnard's star is around 0.0035 that of the sun, it can reasonably be expected to last around 300 times longer - around 3 trillion years.  That's a crude guess.  More accurate models give an even longer life.  Some of the really little ones will still be shining some 10 trillion years from now. {{unsigned|Adeblanc|14:44, 2 February 2023}}
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Two points.  First, a star called Gliese 710 will pass through the Solar System in about 1.3 million years.  Predictions of how close it will come vary, but seem to cluster around 0.3 lighyears (ly) and 0.05 ly.  Both estimates  mean the star will pass through the Oort cloud.  There is even a small chance it will pass just outside the Kuiper belt.  This star is informally called "Uncle Jimbo's Star" because it's coming right at us.  Second, your basic star-shaped star is an easy thing to study in detail and an easy thing to model.  The sun has a radiative core; it cannot add fresh fuel.  As a result, it burns up about 10% of its hydrogen and goes out.  Barnard's star is convective throughout, so it constantly mixes fresh hydrogen into its core.  As a result, Barnard's star will consume 50 - 80 % of its hydrogen before going out.  The reacting masses of the Sun and Barnard's star are almost the same. Since the bolometric luminosity of Barnard's star is around 0.0035 that of the sun, it can reasonably be expected to last around 300 times longer - around 3 trillion years.  That's a crude guess.  More accurate models give an even longer life.  Some of the really little ones will still be shining some 10 trillion years from now.

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