SandyDelights

SandyDelights t1_j3om44n wrote

I don’t disagree, at least re: people who recognize climate change is real, but that’s the problem: not everyone does. A sizable chunk of countries like the US just… Don’t believe it’s actually a thing, and actively push against addressing it out of a desire to “win” and sheer spite.

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SandyDelights t1_ivjnutq wrote

Oh, not going to say that – I was explicitly answering the general question of “if it’s giving off enough light to be a star now is that energy being generated and how does it ‘get out of the solid surface’”, i.e. you don’t need to produce energy to produce light (you just need some form of energy present for it).

That said, yes, but there are a lot of caveats – this article covers it really well and in fairly simple terms.

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SandyDelights t1_ivjmts5 wrote

Objects don’t need to continuously generate energy to produce light – white dwarves are the “dead” cores of stars, but it takes an extraordinary long time for them to radiate away the remnant heat.

The distinction here being they don’t need to generate energy because they already have generated that energy (in the form of heat), so the light (in the case of white dwarves) is just the heat radiating into space as the dead star slowly cools (or causes the star to cool, whichever you prefer).

Good example is a stove burner: turn it on, crank it up to high so it’s burning hot and glowing red, then turn it off, pull the plug if you want to. Does the red go away instantaneously, or does it slowly darken as it cools?

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