MARCH 11 2025
(NOVEMBER 08 2024 MAKE UP)
GOOD MORNING TO THE SON AND THE SKY❕👋🏼
SOL / SOLEIL = “SUN” IN SPANISH 🇲🇽 / FRENCH 🇫🇷
In Spanish and French, the word for “sun” is pronounced as follows (click below):
I LOVE YOU 💓
Howl you doing❓
I hope everything is GREAT with you and at home 🥰
Today for you I have a post about “Our” star, the sun. ☀️⭐️
Today I was thinking about how we measure temperature with respect to how and why we use and determine the temperature of something. 🤔
Interestingly enough on its own, is the method used to come up with a reference point that established the temperature scale using the characteristics of water that can be observed in nature with water going from liquid to ice to gas when freezing and boiling. 💧🫖🧊
A man with the last name Celsius used the 3 states of water mentioned above as something to create and apply a unit of measurement to. 100 and 0 was used for the scale with what was originally 0 degrees Celsius being the temperature when water begins to boil and 100 degrees Celsius being the temperature when water froze. With even increments of 1 now representing each degree 1-99 between the two established points those being 0 and 100 to identify the temperature of 2 things as reference (freeze boil points of water) to now be able to identify the temperature of other things using this scale. If it is hotter than boiling water it is less than zero degrees celsius (decreasing by increments of 1 with negative values -1, -2, -3 etc) and if colder than frozen water it would be more than 100 degrees (increasing by increments of 1 degree celsius 101,102,103 etc) and where things that fall between given a value based on where it fell on the 0-100 scale when measured.
After the Celsius scale was established it was later reversed to the current day standard of 100 being the temperature water begins to boil and 0 in which water freezes and makes more sense considering if it is hotter (meaning MORE heat not LESS heat) it would intuitively be a higher number. 🌡️
Now on to the day’s post star of the show. 😉
The sun is the only star in our solar system and without the sun our planet would be a ball of ice and not be hospitable for life on Earth as we know it. 🥶
The weather was absolutely beautiful today and the most beautiful weather of 2025 thus far. I was able to appreciate our star while out and about today when walking through the city to handle the day’s affairs. 🚶🏻
Here are some interesting facts about the ball of “fire” in the sky:
1. It’s a giant, but not the biggest: The Sun’s diameter is about 1.39 million km (864,000 miles), and it could fit around 1.3 million Earths inside it — but it’s still a medium-sized star compared to others in the universe.
2. It’s mostly hydrogen and helium: The Sun is about 74% hydrogen, 24% helium, and 2% heavier elements. Through nuclear fusion, it converts hydrogen into helium, producing the energy that lights and warms our planet.
3. It takes sunlight 8 minutes to reach Earth: Even though light travels at about 299,792 km per second (186,282 miles per second), the Sun is so far away — about 93 million miles (150 million km) — that sunlight takes 8 minutes and 20 seconds to get here.
4. The Sun’s core is unimaginably hot: Temperatures at the core reach about 15 million°C (27 million°F) due to the immense pressure and fusion reactions happening there.
5. It’s a middle-aged star: The Sun is about 4.6 billion years old and is currently in its main sequence phase, where it has been for about 4 billion years. It’s expected to stay stable for about 5 billion more years before expanding into a red giant and eventually becoming a white dwarf.
6. The Sun rotates — but not like Earth: Because the Sun is a giant ball of gas and plasma, different parts rotate at different speeds. The equator rotates in about 25 days, while areas near the poles take about 35 days.
7. It has powerful solar storms: The Sun’s solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) release bursts of charged particles and magnetic fields that can disrupt satellites, power grids, and even produce beautiful auroras on Earth.
8. The Sun’s gravity holds the solar system together: The Sun’s immense mass — about 99.86% of the total mass of the solar system — creates gravity strong enough to keep planets, asteroids, comets, and other objects in orbit around it.
9. It influences space weather: The solar wind, a constant stream of charged particles from the Sun, shapes the heliosphere, a protective bubble around our solar system, and interacts with planetary magnetic fields.
10. The Sun “rings” like a bell: The Sun experiences acoustic waves that travel through its interior — kind of like sound waves — allowing scientists to study its structure through a process called helioseismology.
What fact did you find most interesting❓ I think it is crazy how big the sun is with the sun being able to fit over a million of our planets inside the space it occupies.
PEACE ☮️

LEAD WITH LOVE
HONESTLY TRY
REPEAT THESE TWO STEPS EVERY DAY
LOVE TRY REPEAT
Believe in yourself
Don’t be hard on yourself
Allow yourself to see what is possible
Never let doubt be the thing that prevents you from trying to achieve what you desire most
Remember your wins
Learn from your mistakes
Have fun along the way
You have more influence over your health and happiness than you know
DRINK WATER❕
Rest well my LOVES
You are LOVED
I hope you have a GREAT DAY‼️ 😎
I LOVE YOU WITH ALL THAT I AM 💕
I AM ONLY A HOWL AWAY IF YOU NEED ME 🐾
WOLF LOVE & GRATUITY, YOUR PROUD FATHER 🐺