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World of Software > News > Nasa reveals how our Sun will SWALLOW Earth and create new planets in shock pics
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Nasa reveals how our Sun will SWALLOW Earth and create new planets in shock pics

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Last updated: 2026/01/23 at 10:47 AM
News Room Published 23 January 2026
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Nasa reveals how our Sun will SWALLOW Earth and create new planets in shock pics
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IS this what the end of days looks like after the Sun has swallowed Earth up?

Fear not, we’ve got some time to go – scientists predict the Sun will die in about five billion years, at which point it will swell into a huge Red Giant before eventually leaving behind a dense ball of ash.

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Could this be what the end of the Sun looks like in five billion years time?Credit: NASA
Helix Nebula is much like our own SunCredit: NASA

But if you want an idea of what the ghost of our solar system might look like, new images from another star paint a very vivid picture.

Nasa has revealed snaps of Helix Nebula, a dying star much like our own Sun.

Helix Nebula – or Eye of God Nebula – is one of the closest dying stars to Earth, located 650 light–years away.

The breathtaking shot gives a glimpse of how things might end for Earth and our solar system.

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It shows blistering winds of rapid-moving hot gas from the dying star as they collide with slower, colder shells of dust and gas that were shed earlier in its life.

Nasa took the photo using its powerful James Webb Space Telescope.

We’ve seen Helix Nebula before but this is a deeper, more detailed view than those taken by the old Hubble Telescope and retired Spitzer Space Telescope.

There’s also a bright white dwarf, the leftover core of the dying star, that lies right at the heart of the nebula, out of the frame of Webb’s snap.

However, while one thing ends new life could rise from the ashes.

“The image reveals how stars recycle their material back into the cosmos, seeding future generations of stars and planets,” Nasa said.

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Hello! I’m Sean Keach, The Sun’s Head of Technology and Science

I’ve been writing about gadgets, games and the future of technology for more than a decade.

During that time I’ve penned thousands of articles, filmed hundreds of videos, talked tech on TV and radio, and travelled around the world to bring you the latest on Apple, Meta, Google, Amazon, Netflix and more.

And I’ve got a weekly newsletter called The Sun Tech that you can read for free every Thursday.

I bring you the latest from the world of tech, including behind-the-scenes action, exclusive content, expert analysis, and plenty of help advice – so please follow along!

It’s been a busy few days for Sun news, having only just revealed incredible never-before-seen footage of the Sun by staging an “artificial eclipse”.

The European Space Agency‘s Proba-3 mission used a pair of spacecraft orbiting Earth to pull it off.

This enabled scientists to see previously impossible views of Earth‘s star, which you can see in the video above.

Image reveals the Sun’s inner corona, the hottest part of our star’s atmosphere in faint yellowCredit: ESA

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