The sun will go out tomorrow!

I remember this story!

Every day the kid would go out with a pail and fill that pail with air, then he’d take his pail of air into the house (insulated REALLY well with plastic sheets and stuff) and heat his pail of air over a fire, until the air in the pail turned from solid to gas. Then he’d take his air pail back outside and get another pail full of air, and bring that inside to heat up again so he’d have one more pail of air to breathe.

I think it was called The Planet That Couldn’t Slow Down!

Would the sun-free earth really get THAT cold that fast, that atmospheric gases would condense or freeze? Remember, the earth itself has its own internal heat source (molten core, kept cooking by radioactive decay down there), which should keep the planet from getting totally stone cold very fast. So how cold would the earth’s surface (and atmosphere) get within the first few years (or centuries)?

It might take many millenia for the planet to get totally cold.

ETA: P.S.: Then what did they do with that frozen oxygen that they collected? Grind it into powder and snort it?

Thanks for all the insight. I’m not sure why I had the intuition that it would happen very fast. I was way off base there. While I was plugging around I found this:

[

](If The Sun Went Out, How Long Would Life On Earth Survive?)

[POST=8336303]Old post[/POST] on what would occur after the sun is extinguished.

Stranger

Thank you, Chronos.
I read that so long ago, I couldn’t remember the name of the story.
I probably should reread it.