Author Topic: YOU LAUGH YOU LOSE v666  (Read 3523269 times)

is there seriously a debate about the sun being a star


You can't wish on the sun because it's not a star. It's a sun.
Why do you think it's called the Sun and not "the Star".

Grow up.

Plus, stars are only out at night and the Sun is out during the day, rendering your thoughts invalid.
No stars are bigger than the sun. If the sun was a star, we'd all be dead.
You're wrong because stars can't do that. And once again, stars are only out at night and not during the day.
No they aren't. The sky turns blue and there is only the sun and clouds as well as people things.


Yo XR-7, since you're quite clearly one person against the rest of everyone else in this thread in this argument, maybe you should do some research to not make a bigger ass of yourself.

Just Ctrl + F "star" on these pages.

The sun is a star:
http://www.space.com/58-the-sun-formation-facts-and-characteristics.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun
http://nineplanets.org/sol.html
http://space-facts.com/the-sun/
http://www.universetoday.com/16338/the-sun/
http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/space/solar-system/sun-article/

There is more than one sun:
http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/physics/78-the-universe/stars-and-star-clusters/general-questions/346-what-is-the-difference-between-a-star-and-a-sun-beginner


Because there is a massive amount of confusion over it, the sun is a several thousand degree hot natural fusion reactor fusing hydrogen atoms into helium atoms at a rate of 620 million metric tons of hydrogen every second. It outputs the energy released largely in the form of light and neutrinos. It was formed when nearby supernovae triggered the gravitational collapse of a molecular cloud, causing it to gain enough concentrated mass to begin nuclear fusion; the remnants of the cloud were subsequently blown away and formed planets, comets, moons, and various other bits of dust and rock in the solar system.

Stars are also naturally occurring hydrogen fusion reactors, formed from the gravitational collapse of a molecular cloud, which output much of their produced energy in the form of light and neutrinos. Their excess material and dust was blown away to form planets, moons, and various bits of dust found in extrasolar systems, much like our sun.

Therefore, the sun is a star.

://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/000/583/043/800.png[/img]

yeah I know. scientists already proved the sun is a special cloud

is there seriously a debate about the sun being a star

It apparently seems that way.

Because there is a massive amount of confusion over it, the sun is a several thousand degree hot natural fusion reactor fusing hydrogen atoms into helium atoms at a rate of 620 million metric tons of hydrogen every second. It outputs the energy released largely in the form of light and neutrinos. It was formed when nearby supernovae triggered the gravitational collapse of a molecular cloud, causing it to gain enough concentrated mass to begin nuclear fusion; the remnants of the cloud were subsequently blown away and formed planets, comets, moons, and various other bits of dust and rock in the solar system.

Stars are also naturally occurring hydrogen fusion reactors, formed from the gravitational collapse of a molecular cloud, which output much of their produced energy in the form of light and neutrinos. Their excess material and dust was blown away to form planets, moons, and various bits of dust found in extrasolar systems, much like our sun.

Therefore, the sun is a star.

We don't know that the sun fuses hydrogen because no one has ever been there to take samples and study it up close.

What's a star?
Can you touch it?
Can you eat it?
Can you kill it?
Are you a star?

We don't know that the sun fuses hydrogen because no one has ever been there to take samples and study it up close.
We have, however, taken spectroscopic readings of its composition. The sun is about 75% hydrogen and 24% helium by mass, with the remaining 2% being virtually everything else naturally found in the solar system.

What's a star?
Can you touch it?
Can you eat it?
Can you kill it?
Are you a star?

Last time I did those things God had to stop me

"me damn it squideey would you quit eating the stars"



you act smart but yet you couldn't even recognize satire
Nitpicking, nitpicking.

Even if it was satire, it was so drawn out that any satirical value would be lost.