Submitted by spiteful_rr_dm_TA t3_11vamkr in askscience
I've heard much about the fate of stars, and what their ultimate deaths will most likely be; be it collapsing into a black hole, exploding, etc. But what about rocky bodies? Suppose Earth doesn't get swallowed by the Sun, what will happen in billions or trillions of years? Will it just always exist, assuming it doesn't get destroyed by outside forces?
Alexander_Schwann t1_jcsdcdb wrote
If the earth manages to avoid being consumed by the Sun dying, it will probably stick around basically forever.
However, eventually (in tens of billions of years) the liquid layers of the Earth's core and mantle will cool and solidify, which will have significant effects on the surface. The Earth's magnetic field will disappear, leaving it unprotected from ionizing radiation and cosmic rays. That will eventually lead to the atmosphere being lost along with all liquid water and Earth will end up looking more like Mars (which we think also once had oceans and an atmosphere). Luckily, we shouldn't have to worry about that for at least 90 billion years.