© NASA/ESASecond life. The white dwarf star at the center of this planetary nebula may be accompanied by a second-generation world, formed from the debris of the dying star's original planets.
Jackson Lake, Wyoming - The world may not end on 21 December 2012,
as predicted by some doomsayers, but one thing is certain: Earth won't be around forever. Astronomers at the Extreme Solar Systems II conference here, who study the birth and evolution of planetary systems, are also coming to grips with the ultimate fate of planets like our own. And although Earth's own future isn't too bright, it looks like our planet could possibly reincarnate as a new world.
At the end of their lives, massive stars much larger than the sun detonate as supernovae, hurling most of their planets into deep space in the process. Recently, some researchers even claimed to have detected such rogue planets. But stars like our sun swell into bloated red giants when the nuclear fuel in their cores is depleted. As a result, some 5 billion years from now, the sun will engulf the inner planets, Mercury and Venus.
According to theoretical physicist Eva Villaver of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid in Spain, it's unclear whether Earth will survive this phase. "It's a tricky question," she says. If the sun loses much of its outer layers into space, Earth will end up in a wider, safer orbit. But this might be offset by tidal effects from the sun, which are more or less comparable to the tides of the moon and which would draw our planet inward, so it would get swallowed by the sun. "We don't know which effect will be strongest," Villaver says.
Comment: To learn more about how 'Scientific Evidence is becoming more unreliable' read the excellent article in The Dot Connector Magazine Issue 14 - 'The Corruption of Science'
The Corruption of Science in America