Ladies and Gentlemen,
There's no doubt, eternity in the Universe depends greatly on stars - but how long does a star exist in its life-supporting and stable terms? The nearest star to us, humans is the Sun and you know many facts about the Sun already... The Sun is surrounded by the Corona above its surface and the Corona is the place where the "welding" is proceeding that means thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen at temperatures of 400 million degrees Celsius... It is "welding" in the Corona that supplies the Solar System with white and visible light among others...
Underneath the Corona there is the sphere of the Sun and the temperatures of the surface of the Sun is approx. 5000 - 6000 degrees Celsius hot... If thermonuclear fusion would proceed in the inside of the Sun then the surface of this sphere should be much hotter... 5000 - 6000 degrees Celsius mean that the surface of the Sun is made of lava just like it was a stone planet, you can also observe the lava streaming on the surface of the Sun... So the Sun seems to be a stone planet with the Corona above its surface and it is not alone with its structure... Earth is a stone planet, too and it has got a very hot "thermo-sphere" in its atmosphere where maybe nuclear fusion is proceeding in a very modest amount... The Moon is similar to the dark parts of the surface of the Sun with its grey dust...
It is a major question where does the hydrogen come from that sustains the nuclear fusion in the Corona of the Sun (and maybe in the Thermosphere of Earth)? Around the Sun there is nothing but space where there is hardly anything so hydrogen cannot originate from space but it can only originate from the planet-like sphere of the Sun... And how can be a stone planet the source of hydrogen? I guess that places of the Universe with a great mass capture neutrinos and hydrogen is formed by the great mass out of neutrinos... If neutrinos are eternal which may be imagined because in many of their characteristics they are already super-natural then the Sun and other stars are eternal, too together with their essential life-support...
Best wishes, Joseph de la Mikula and Team
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