shinbits said:
I've repeated this many times already. It's not just the sun's strength, but that the sun's strenth increases each year that you go back in time, due to the fact that it loses mass over time. As a result, the amount of light recieved by earth from the sun increases.
Shin, as Kerr and others have tried to explain to you, this statement is absolutely backwards.
Here is why.
The statement that a more massive star produces more energy is correct for the birth of stars. When stars are born, they consist almost entirely of Hydrogen. In this, stars are essentially all the same, and thus the more massive a star is, the more energy it puts out.
However, this does not stay correct over time. Yes, the star is losing mass, and thus it does produce less and less energy from its hydrogen reactions. However, it is not losing all the mass of the hydrogen involved in fusion.
Fusion is what powers the sun. 2 hydrogen atoms under immense pressure and heat fuse into a single Helium atom , 2 alpha particles, and electro magnetic radiation. This energy is then felt here on earth in the form of heat, visible light, and the solar wind.
Over time, the amount of hydrogen decreases, and the amount of Helium increases. Thus the molecular weights of the atoms in the sun increase over time. This actually increases the speed of the reactions over time, and thus increases the energy output.
Eventually the Sun's core will increase in temperature, and the energy output will get so high, that gravity is no longer strong enough to hold it all together. The sun will expand dramatically untill a point of equilibrium is met. The sun will now be a red giant, and will be burning Helium instead of hydrogen.
This cycle will continue, with the sun burning progressively heavier elements, helium-beryilum-carbon, till the energy output and gravity are no longer in balance, and the sun collapes into a white dwarf.
So yes Shin, in one respect you are correct. A more massive star does emit more energy than a less massive star. However, trying to aply this to the entire life of a star is a fallacious method. It is much like trying to apply Newtonian Mechanics to sub-atomic particles, it just doesn't apply at these levels.
Shin, you know the surface level information on most of these subjects. However, instead of following through with your studies to get to the deeper, more advanced understanding, you are taking these simple beginings and trying to solve problems for which they are inadequete.
You are trying to establish yourself as an authority on these subejcts, when every post you make demsontrates the glaring holes in your understanding. Instead of coming off as educated, you are coming off as ignorant and bull headed. Please, as I have asked you numerous times, take some time to actually learn the full complexities of a subject before you try to debate it. Stop voluntarily looking foolish, take some responsibility for your education, and learn.