Yes in about 4 billion years the sun will be gone but we will be gone well before that burned to a crisp as the sun will expand and gobble up Mercury and Venus.
You seem to get confused easily - I never mentioned anything about the Sun burning out so what follows after your comments makes no sense.
This is the sentence that makes sense "If the sun's energy is decreasing while the Earth is warming, then the sun can't be the main control of the temperature." Read the whole sentence and do try to understand.
I knew is was too much heavy lifting for you, however the science says you are wrong. But hey, just post a link that supports your belief and let people choose which to believe?
Over the last 35 years the sun has shown a cooling trend. However global temperatures continue to increase. If the sun's energy is decreasing while the Earth is warming, then the sun can't be the main control of the temperature.
Figure 1 shows the trend in global temperature compared to changes in the amount of solar energy that hits the Earth. The sun's energy fluctuates on a cycle that's about 11 years long. The energy changes by about 0.1% on each cycle. If the Earth's temperature was controlled mainly by the sun, then it should have cooled between 2000 and 2008.
Some people try to blame the sun for the current rise in temperatures by cherry picking the data. They only show data from periods when sun and climate data track together. They draw a false conclusion by ignoring the last few decades when the data shows the opposite result.
Here is some selective reading for you. Yes there will be a test when you're done. Posting nonsensical BS when you obviously have not done your homework makes you appear as dumb as Trump. If that is possible.
Blamed for Climate Change, Oil Companies Invest in Carbon Removal Chevron, Occidental Petroleum and BHP have invested in Carbon Engineering, a start-up developing technology to take carbon out of the atmosphere.
Climate Change Is Complex. We’ve Got Answers to Your Questions. By JUSTIN GILLIS Illustrations by JON HAN. We know. Global warming is daunting. So here’s a place to start: 17 often-asked questions with some straightforward answers.