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Sun tipo de personalidade mbti

Personalidade

"Que tipo de personalidade é Sun? Sun é um tipo de personalidade ENTJ em mbti, 8w9 - so/sp - 835 em enneagram, SCOAI em Big 5, EIE em sociônicos."

Te Dom: It will support life on a planetary body, but only if one characteristic of a planet fulfills all the others properly and has a suitable environment. It is a moderate type of star to us, yet can be quite violent if you step outside of your planet's comfort zone. Ni Aux: It carefully organized its sphere of influence so that life on Earth could form at the beginning, but become intelligent right during the middle of its lifespan, so that we could observe the Sun in its complete glory; not too young and puny, but also not too old and scorching. Strangely enough we also gain wisdom as we age, just like evolving life does. Coincidence? I think not. Se Tert: The more hydrogen it fuses inside of itself, the more heat it emits. That's why approaching it is like looking at an ember in your furnace. And once the Sun runs out of hydrogen, it will in desperation expand to consume possible alternative hydrogen in the bodies that orbit it, including Earth (third function manifests in a childish way). Fi Inf: It may not end in a supernova, but it would shed most of its outer material and collapse the inner material on itself in order to become a white dwarf, long after we would have abandoned it. But if our descendants were to somehow return to it, the remainder white dwarf would surely be interesting to look at.

Biografia

The star of the show, literally and figuratively. About 99.9% of all the mass in the Solar system is in the sun. Our Sun is a wonderfully stable one, unusually so even for a G-type, which is beneficial for us. Other stars big and small often emit dangerous-to-life x-ray flares. She has the odd sunspot here and there too, and thank goodness, last time our Sun didn't, we experienced an ice age. Rather than red dwarfs, that shine out mostly infrared light, she emits a lot of light on the visible spectrum, which is just great for photosynthesising plants. She does emit ultraviolet radiation too, so put on that sunblock before you step outside. Sadly, all good things must come to an end. The Sun is already 4.6 billion years old, and when it uses up too much of its Hydrogen reserves, it'll get hotter and hotter, until becoming a humongous Red Giant that'll no doubt swallow up the inner planets along with Earth.

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