<span>Our Sun will slowly get hotter as more and more Helium accumulates in the Sun's core. In ~1 billion years, liquid water will no longer be possible on Earth's surface, and the oceans will completely boil away, resulting in a Venus-like planet. Only thermophyllic bacteria may be able to survive, perhaps at the poles. In ~4-5billion years, our Sun will have converted ~10% of its Hydrogen to Helium, and thus become so hot that Helium to Carbon fusion will begin in earnest, causing the "Helium flash" which will convert our Sun into a red giant, and swallow and vaporize all of the rocky inner planets. It may even blow off a planetary nebula. (Contrary to what the others have said, our Sun will not 'run out' of Hydrogen.) </span>
It's 7 kilometres from earth in light years
The appropriate response is Structuralism. It is a strategy for elucidation and examination of parts of human insight, conduct, culture, and experience that spotlights on connections of complexity between components in an applied framework that reflect designs basic shallow assorted qualities.
The answer is 27 Trillion