Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Carlos Lagrange has a 103 mph answer to Aaron Judge in stiff Yankees test

Carlos Lagrange has a 103 mph answer to Aaron Judge in stiff Yankees test

February 17, 2026
Trump says ‘this is a Democrat shutdown’ as he touts low inflation, falling murder rate

Trump says ‘this is a Democrat shutdown’ as he touts low inflation, falling murder rate

February 17, 2026
Swalwell slammed for missing more votes in 2025 than Dem colleague who passed away

Swalwell slammed for missing more votes in 2025 than Dem colleague who passed away

February 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Carlos Lagrange has a 103 mph answer to Aaron Judge in stiff Yankees test
  • Trump says ‘this is a Democrat shutdown’ as he touts low inflation, falling murder rate
  • Swalwell slammed for missing more votes in 2025 than Dem colleague who passed away
  • Hulu’s Hit Series ‘Tell Me Lies’ Is Officially Ending After Season 3 Following Record-Breaking Run
  • Chris Jones already recruiting Tyreek Hill for Chiefs reunion after Dolphins release
  • Gavin Newsom presidential front-runner reveals battle with severe dyslexia
  • How Much Time Has Passed on Netflix’s Longest-Running Show ‘Virgin River’ Since Season 1? Timeline Explained
  • Lindsey Vonn returns home after Winter Olympics injury but says she’s still not able to stand
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » How long do most planets last?
How long do most planets last?
Science

How long do most planets last?

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 15, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

Planets go through different life stages: They form, evolve and eventually meet an end. But the timelines for these processes differ widely between Earth-like planets and worlds that orbit less-powerful stars.

So, how long do most planets last?

First, it’s important to understand the life cycles of planets.


You may like

Sign up for our newsletter

(Image credit: Marilyn Perkins / Future)

Sign up for our weekly Life’s Little Mysteries newsletter to get the latest mysteries before they appear online.

“Planets start off as microscopic dust grains in disks orbiting young stars, and eventually grow by a huge amount through a series of collisions,” Sean Raymond, an astrophysicist at the University of Bordeaux in France, told Live Science in an email.

Gas giants, like Jupiter and Saturn, start off as massive rocky and icy cores, and then capture gas from the disk to become giants. Rocky planets like Earth undergo a late phase of giant collisions with other growing planets and smaller objects after the gas disk from the sun had dissipated, Raymond said. However, there is still some debate among scientists about the order in which planets formed.

Defining the “end” of a planet, however, is more complicated. “You could say a planet lasts until it’s destroyed,” Matthew Reinhold, a planetary scientist at Stanford University, told Live Science. Or, you could define a planet’s ending to be when it no longer operates under the same conditions. “You could say, ‘This was a world that had these conditions at some point, but now it has changed and has these very different conditions,” Reinhold said. “Because I prefer those previous conditions; I consider this planet as having ended.'”

Let’s take Earth as an example. Like many others, our planet’s lifespan is tied to the evolution of the sun. The sun currently creates heat and light through nuclear fusion at its core — a process in which hydrogen transforms into helium. In about 5 billion years, the sun will run out of hydrogen, at which point it will expand into a red giant and eventually collapse into itself.

An illustration of Proxima b, the closest star to our system, as a glowing ball of red light, with a small planet silhouetted in the foreground

An illustration of Proxima b, a dim red dwarf that is the nearest star to the sun. Planets that orbit red dwarf stars tend to have long lives. (Image credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)

“Our Earth will ‘die’ in multiple ways,” Raymond said. “First, the slowly-brightening Sun will make conditions on the Earth unlivable by vaporizing the oceans. Then, Earth may be swallowed by the Sun when it becomes a red giant. Finally, Earth (if it’s still around) will be tossed into interstellar space.”

According to these calculations, Earth’s total lifespan will be about 9.5 billion years.

Earth probably won’t live as long as most planets, he noted. That’s because, unlike the sun, which is a yellow dwarf star, most stars are red dwarfs that are smaller and cooler than our sun, and they burn fuel much more slowly. “They can last for trillions of years,” Reinhold said.


You may like

In that case, it might not be the death of the star, but rather an internal process that leads to these planets’ demise.

In his work, Reinhold has modeled what might happen to a hypothetical habitable planet orbiting a red dwarf star. Active geology, such as plate tectonics, is considered crucial for habitability because it allows nutrients to move between the planet’s mantle and surface and drives the carbon-silicate cycle.

“We want a planet that can stabilize its climate,” Reinhold said, and the carbon-silicate cycle is Earth’s natural thermostat.

Reinhold found that mantle convection will last somewhere between 30 billion and 90 billion years, while mantle melting might last somewhere between 16 billion and 23 billion years. Although these number ranges are too large to be meaningful, Reinhold said, they suggest that any Earth-like planets orbiting a red dwarf will die of an internal process long before their stars get close to the ends of their lives. And even on the shortest timelines, most rocky planets orbiting red dwarfs will maintain their conditions for billions of years.

Bigger stars have much shorter lifespans, because they use up their nuclear fuel more quickly. So the fate of an inner planet orbiting an A-type white star, for instance, would be tied up to the star’s lifespan of 100 million to 1 billion years.

It’s also possible for gas giants to lose their atmospheres due to the intense light from their star, Reinhold said, becoming rocky planets. This process depends on how close a planet is to its star, how much energetic radiation the star emits, and how strong a planet’s gravity is. “The stronger their gravity, the better they are at holding onto their atmospheres, and the more radiation they get from their star, the more intense the stripping power,” Reinhold explained. Depending on those factors, this can take anywhere from millions to billions of years.

The end of the universe

Even when a planet’s conditions change over time, the rock itself still exists. But over large timescales, there are different possibilities for its fate as the probability of rare events increases. It may collide with another planet, or be kicked out of its orbit.

“In all of this mayhem over quadrillions of years, the planets that have been kicked away from their stars will be kicked out of the galaxy to wander for eternity in the void,” Reinhold said. “What actually seals [its] fate really comes down to the nature of the end of the universe,” said Reinhold.


Solar system quiz: How well do you know our cosmic neighborhood?

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Hidden beauty of Zimbabwe’s 2.5 billion-year-old ‘geological marvel’ revealed in striking astronaut photo — Earth from space

Hidden beauty of Zimbabwe’s 2.5 billion-year-old ‘geological marvel’ revealed in striking astronaut photo — Earth from space

Many men lose their Y chromosomes as they age. It may shorten their lives.

Many men lose their Y chromosomes as they age. It may shorten their lives.

Tumaco-Tolita Seated Elder: This 2,000-year-old depiction of an aged man with wrinkles struck fear in people because it held ‘the power’

Tumaco-Tolita Seated Elder: This 2,000-year-old depiction of an aged man with wrinkles struck fear in people because it held ‘the power’

Vaccine denial sets Americans up for more chronic illness

Vaccine denial sets Americans up for more chronic illness

Snakes keep evolving into cannibals — here’s what scientists think is going on

Snakes keep evolving into cannibals — here’s what scientists think is going on

‘The brain consistently moved upward and backward’: Astronauts’ brains physically shift in their heads during spaceflight

‘The brain consistently moved upward and backward’: Astronauts’ brains physically shift in their heads during spaceflight

Lucky few to see ‘ring of fire’ solar eclipse over Antarctica on Feb. 17

Lucky few to see ‘ring of fire’ solar eclipse over Antarctica on Feb. 17

Deepest views from James Webb and Chandra telescopes reveal a monster object that defies theory — Space photo of the week

Deepest views from James Webb and Chandra telescopes reveal a monster object that defies theory — Space photo of the week

Ancient rock art depicting hunters and geometric shapes discovered in Egypt’s Sinai Desert — and it spans a period of 10,000 years

Ancient rock art depicting hunters and geometric shapes discovered in Egypt’s Sinai Desert — and it spans a period of 10,000 years

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Trump says ‘this is a Democrat shutdown’ as he touts low inflation, falling murder rate

Trump says ‘this is a Democrat shutdown’ as he touts low inflation, falling murder rate

February 17, 2026
Swalwell slammed for missing more votes in 2025 than Dem colleague who passed away

Swalwell slammed for missing more votes in 2025 than Dem colleague who passed away

February 17, 2026
Hulu’s Hit Series ‘Tell Me Lies’ Is Officially Ending After Season 3 Following Record-Breaking Run

Hulu’s Hit Series ‘Tell Me Lies’ Is Officially Ending After Season 3 Following Record-Breaking Run

February 17, 2026
Chris Jones already recruiting Tyreek Hill for Chiefs reunion after Dolphins release

Chris Jones already recruiting Tyreek Hill for Chiefs reunion after Dolphins release

February 17, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Gavin Newsom presidential front-runner reveals battle with severe dyslexia

Gavin Newsom presidential front-runner reveals battle with severe dyslexia

February 17, 2026
How Much Time Has Passed on Netflix’s Longest-Running Show ‘Virgin River’ Since Season 1? Timeline Explained

How Much Time Has Passed on Netflix’s Longest-Running Show ‘Virgin River’ Since Season 1? Timeline Explained

February 17, 2026
Lindsey Vonn returns home after Winter Olympics injury but says she’s still not able to stand

Lindsey Vonn returns home after Winter Olympics injury but says she’s still not able to stand

February 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.