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  • I'm Fraser Cain, the publisher of Universe Today

  • Life has existed on Earth for billions of years, appearing shortly after the planet

  • had cooled and liquid water became available.

  • From the first bacteria to the amazingly complex animals we see today, life has colonized every

  • corner of our planet.

  • As you know, our Sun has a limited lifespan.

  • Over the next 5 billion years, it will burn the last of its hydrogen, bloat up as a red

  • giant and consume Mercury and Venus.

  • This would be totally disastrous for local flora and fauna, but all life on the surface

  • of the Earth will already be long gone.

  • In fact, we have less than a billion years to enjoy the surface of our planet before

  • it becomes inhospitable.

  • Because our Sun... is heating up.

  • You can't feel it over the course of a human lifetime, but over hundreds of millions of

  • years, the amount of radiation pouring out of the Sun will grow.

  • This will heat the surface of our planet to the point that the oceans boil.

  • At the core of the Sun, the high temperatures and pressures convert hydrogen into helium.

  • For every tonne of material the Sun converts, it shrinks a bit making the Sun denser, and

  • a little hotter.

  • Over the course of the next billion years or so, the amount of energy the Earth receives

  • from the Sun will increase by about 10%.

  • Which doesn't sound like much, but it means a greenhouse effect of epic proportions.

  • Whatever is left of the ice caps will melt, and the water itself will boil away, leaving

  • the planet dry and parched.

  • Water vapor is a powerful greenhouse gas, this will drive the temperatures even hotter.

  • Plate tectonics will shut down, and all the carbon will be stripped from the atmosphere.

  • It'll be bad.

  • As temperatures rise, complex lifeforms will find life on Earth less hospitable.

  • It will seem as if evolution is running in reverse, as plants and animals die off, leaving

  • the invertebrates and eventually just microbial life.

  • This rise in temperature will be the end of life on the surface of Earth as we know it.

  • Still, there are reserves of water deep underground which will continue to protect microbial life

  • for billions of years.

  • Perhaps they'll experience that final baking when the Sun does reach the end of its life.

  • Even a few hundred million years is an incomprehensible amount of time compared to the age of our

  • civilization.

  • If humanity does survive well into the future, is there anything we could do about this problem?

  • As the Sun heats up, making Earth inhospitable, it heats up the rest of the Solar System too.

  • Frozen worlds in the Solar System will melt, becoming more habitable.

  • It's possible that future civilizations could relocate to the asteroid belt, or the moons

  • of Saturn.

  • We could try something even more radical: move the Earth.

  • By carefully steering asteroids so they barely miss us, an advanced civilization could distort

  • the Earth's orbit, relocating our planet further from the Sun.

  • As the Sun heats up, our planet would be continuously repositioned so the surface temperature stays

  • roughly the same. Of course, this would be tricky business. Make the wrong move, and

  • you're facing the frigid cold of the outer Solar System.

  • So there's no need to panic. Life here has a few hundred million years left; a billion,

  • tops. But if we want to continue on for billions of years, we'll want to add solar heating

  • to our growing list of big problems.

  • Thanks

  • for watching.

I'm Fraser Cain, the publisher of Universe Today

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地球上での生命の生存期間は? (How Long Will Life Survive On Earth?)

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    Wonderful に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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