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Universe Today

The Shape of a Black Hole Written in Rock Titan's Hidden Blanket Did Life Start When Impacts Created Vast Hydrothermal Systems in Earth's Crust? Meet REMORA: The Autonomous Space Fleet Built to Tag and Track Asteroids Watch the Moon Occult Venus in the Daytime for North America on June 17th Astrochemical Model Digs Into the Universe's Missing Sulfur Building in Space With Laser "Origami" On The Hunt For Cosmic Dawn And The Universe’s Very First Stars David Kipping Has a New Take on the Existence of Advanced Life in the Universe... and the Numbers are Not Encouraging! This is How Supermassive Black Holes Feed Themselves NASA’s Proposed EVE Mission Aims to Solve the Radius Valley Mystery Where Not to Look in the Search for ET Reading the Moon in X-rays Astronomers Find a Four-Carbon Sugar in Deep Space Why Can't the Universe Be Cyclic? Part 4: When a Good Idea Meets Bad Data Orbiting Stars Give Clues to a Quiescent Black Hole's Mass Magnetic Fields Help Binary Stars Form and Black Holes Merge A Rare Meteorite Just Revealed a Lost, Mars-Sized Planet from the Dawn of the Solar System Neptune’s Weirdest Moon Nereid Might Be the Lone Survivor of an Ancient "Moonpocalypse" Space Telescopes Are Now Overwhelmed by Satellite Trails Why Can't the Universe Be Cyclic? Part 3: The Ekpyrotic Universe and Its Bouncing Branes Catch Comet 220P McNaught in Outburst The Hidden Physics Complicating Interstellar Lightsails Student Astronomer Identifies Source of Mysterious Cosmic Signals Why Can't the Universe Be Cyclic? Part 2: The Awkward Triumph of Inflation The SETI Institute Releases Technosignature Report on 3I/ATLAS Why Can't the Universe Be Cyclic? Part 1: The Lure of the Eternal Universe A “Green” Dual-Mode Engine is About to Give CubeSats the Best of Both Worlds SETI Panel Revises Recommendations for Dealing With 'Disclosure Day' NASA Bids Farewell to MAVEN Mars Mission in Public Teleconference Astronomers Make "Live" Observation of a Nearby Protoplanetary Disk's Rotation The Cosmic Web Like You've Never Seen it Before They've Been Searching for the Milky Way's Black Hole Wind for 50 Years and Finally Found It What Happens to a Star That Captures A Primordial Black Hole? New Cloud-Detecting Method Will Help Astronomers Characterize Exoplanets Even Without A Magnetosphere, Mars Can Still Deflect Some Solar Wind The Unexpected Brightness 'Gap' in an Ancient Globular Cluster Cosmic Tryst: Venus Meets Jupiter at Dusk A Brief-ish History of SETI. Part IX: What Have We Found? A New Map of Stars Shows That the Small Magellanic Cloud is Expanding Here's Why So Many Massive Galaxies in the Early Universe Stop Forming Stars Exoplanetary Weather Watchers Find Strong Evidence of Magnetic Fields Asteroid Dirt is "Fluffier" Than We Thought Blue Origin Issues Official Statement on New Glenn Explosion Astronomers Uncover Statistical Evidence for Recoiling Supermassive Black Holes The Next-Generation Very Large Array Prototype (ngVLA) Gathers its First Light Flash-Melted Glass from Chang'e-5 Reveals a High Levels of Iron on the Moon How Early Earth's Unlikely Chemical Hero Appeared Mars Hid its Warm, Wet Crystals Underground Could the Milky Way’s Missing Mass Be Hiding in a Swarm of Interstellar Comets? Ceres’ Surface Is Much More Complex Than Previously Thought Are the JWST's Early Overrmassive Black Holes Just Normal-Range Outliers? Astrobiology's Looming Statistical Crisis The Filamentary Funnels That Form Stars How Heavy Can a Neutron Star Get? Jupiter Created the Birthplace of Rocky Bodies in the Early Solar System How a Giant Moon and a Steam Atmosphere Built the Recipe for Life A Faster Way To Forecast Alien Weather Longest-period young transiting exoplanets discovered Roman Telescope's massive infrared mirror is ready to fly JWST Finds Methane Atmosphere on Temperate Exoplanet Blue Origin's Lunar Lander Just Passed Its Toughest Test Yet The Loudest Planet Wins A Brief-ish History of SETI. Part VIII: Paradox? What Paradox? The Galaxy That Forgot to Spin Did We Invent Dark Energy for Nothing? It Took a Cosmic Village to Shape Early Galaxies Lasers at the Lunar Poles Could Help Astronauts Navigate Who You Send to the Moon Matters More Than You Think MAVEN Spacecraft Finds New Plasma Squeezing at Mars The Sun is Changing and We Don’t Know Why ESA Selects Two New Scout-Class Missions 20,000 Eyes on the Universe The Flash Memory That Space Can't Destroy We Can Now Weigh Galaxies Using Dead Stars As Scales JWST Studies a Dark and Airless Super-Earth Earthly Hors d'oeuvres For Hungry Red Dwarfs The Name N159 Doesn't Do This Brilliant Star-Forming Region Justice An Orbiting Satellite Triad Reveals Motions Inside Earth Just Like Stars, Open Clusters Can Form Binary Pairs Astrophysical Calibration Could "Autotune" Gravitational Wave Detection Something Just Passed Between Us and a Distant Star. When Spacetime Crystallises, a Black Hole is Born The Weirdness of Early Universe SMBHs Gets Even Weirder A Natural Chemistry Laboratory in Protostar Shock Waves A New Model Helps Astronomers Study How Merging Black Holes Ring Why the Second Full Moon of May is a ‘Blue Minimoon’ NASA TESS Reveals Epic All-Sky Map of Distant Worlds Astronomers Observe the Most Chemically Primitive Galaxy in the Early Universe Where Are All the Intermediate Mass Black Holes? Microlensing Fast Radio Bursts Might Reveal Them When the Sun Tries to Explode and Fails The Sun Just Did Something Nobody Expected and it Kept Going For 19 Days Three Stars, One Extraordinary System and a Drama Still to Come The Definitive Census of Multiple Star Systems Within 10 Parsecs Are Satellite Megaconstellations Accidentally Geoengineering the Earth? The Risk of Stellar Flybys and GJ 710 How Mars Can Help Us Understand 'Marginal' Exoplanets Ultrahigh-energy Cosmic Rays May Be Ultraheavy in Origin NASA's Next-Generation AI Processor Passes Early Testing
What Would Happen if the Sun Stopped? Part 2: Kelvin and Helmholtz at the Ready
Paul Sutter · 2026-06-17 · via Universe Today

(This is Part 2 of a series on what would happen if the Sun stopped. Read Part 1 first.)

When you crank up your stove to heat a pan to cook your eggs, you have to wait a while. It takes time for the heat to work its way into the metal. Once the pan is hot enough you cook your eggs, and when you're done you can sit and eat them while the pan slowly cools back down on its own.

The Sun is slightly larger than a stovetop pan, but the same basic physics applies. Once upon a time the Sun, or rather the cold cloud of gas and dust that would become the Sun, was cold. Now it is hot. It took time to become hot. And the surface of the Sun is exposed to the frigid vacuum of space, constantly radiating its warmth away into the dark, constantly cooling off.

All of which means fusion isn't the hot pan itself. Fusion is the flame underneath it. Fusion keeps the Sun warm. Take the flame away, and the Sun stays warm anyway, at least for a while, because like every hot thing it takes time to cool down.

In fact, the rate of fusion is tuned with remarkable precision to keep the Sun just barely warm enough to avoid catastrophe, through a not-so-magical process called hydrostatic equilibrium.

Here's how it works. The Sun is a giant ball of gas, so giant that its own gravity is forever trying to pull it tighter. And when a giant ball of gas gets squeezed into a smaller volume, it heats up. Back in the 19th century, astronomers were genuinely stumped about how the Sun had managed to stay warm for so long. So in 1854 a German aristocrat named Hermann von Helmholtz suggested that maybe it kept warm simply by slowly shrinking. Start with a big ball of gas, let it compress, watch it heat up, let that heat escape as lovely sunshine, let it compress a little more, and keep the whole cycle running.

A decade later another aristocrat, because this was very much the age of "if you want to be a scientist it helps enormously to be independently wealthy," took up the problem. William Thomson, the first Baron Kelvin, Lord Kelvin to us plebes, ran more careful calculations to pin down the lifetime of the Sun. And he got the wrong answer.

He flirted with a few possibilities but generally landed somewhere around a few tens of millions of years. A long time, certainly. But badly out of step with what the geologists, and later the biologists, were finding. They were arriving at ages for the Earth in the hundreds of millions, even billions, of years. For decades afterward astronomers were the butt of jokes in scientific circles (I have no interest in discussing any present-day parallels), in part because Lord Kelvin had been so loudly, publicly confident about his numbers, which were, as noted, very wrong. It took until the 1920s and the birth of nuclear physics before anyone could propose a power source that would let the Sun burn for billions of years.

But even though Lord Kelvin was wrong, he was wrong in a deeply useful way. Because he knew nothing of fusion, it is precisely his calculations that we will use to work out what happens if fusion shuts off. So, thanks, I suppose.

And here is the genuinely beautiful part: nuclear fusion regulates itself. If the Sun contracts a little, the core compresses, more protons get the chance to speed-date one another, and the fusion rate climbs, which heats the core and pushes it back outward, cooling things off. And if the Sun puffs up a little, the fusion reactions slow, the pressure drops, and the Sun settles back down. A thermostat with no moving parts.

In other words, and the thermodynamics nerds among you will get a real kick out of this, the Sun actually heats up as it loses energy. That sounds completely backward, but nature is under no obligation to be intuitive, especially where self-gravitating systems are concerned.

The fusion is dialed in just right to keep the Sun from either exploding in a blaze of glory or collapsing into a black hole. And it turns out that "just right" is not very much fusion at all. Fusion is a trickle topping off a vast reservoir of stored heat, just barely enough to keep the lights on, no more and no less. Which means that if fusion shuts off, we still have all that heat banked inside the body of the Sun, and we still have the Kelvin-Helmholtz mechanism (yes, Helmholtz proposed it first, but Kelvin-Helmholtz simply rolls off the tongue more easily, sorry Hermann) standing ready to keep the Sun powered even longer, just by letting it shrink.

In other words, the Sun is hot because it's hot. Fusion only keeps the lights on. And because the Sun is gigantic and crowded and complicated and messy, changes inside it take a very, very long time to make themselves felt.

Case in point: the photons.

In Part 3, we follow a single photon on its absurd hundred-thousand-year journey out of the Sun, and discover that the sunlight on your face is older than human civilization.