You get hydrogen from water
(u must have special kinds of machines to extract it
from the water) or u can make it at home
with a 1.5v battery....
The hydrogen that the sun fuses is already part of the sun's mass and has been since its formation. The sun is 75% hydrogen.
Indirectly; the Sun makes energy by fusing the hydrogen nuclei into helium, and releasing a tiny bit of energy.
The sun burns hyrogen to make helium.
When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy. When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy.
It derives its energy from nuclear fusion reactions that transform, in its nucleus, hydrogen into helium.
Like all main sequence stars, a red dwarf is powered by the fusion of hydrogen into helium.
The sun does not burn in the classical sense. The sun is so massive that, at its center, matter is compressed with such force hard that Hydrogen atoms fuse together to form Helium atoms. This fusion process liberates a great deal of energy, which escapes as light.
Burn hydrogen
The sun fuses hydrogen in its core. It does not burn it in the sense we are familiar with.
No. The hydrogen on the Sun does not burn; it fuses to make helium instead.
The Sun will continue to fuse hydrogen for another 10 billion years.
No, sun does not need oxygen to burn. The "Fusion" of Hydrogen atoms is what produces immense amount of energy in the sun.
it is made of mostly hydrogen and helium
The SUN does NOT BURN gas. It is a FUSION of hydrogen atoms into helium atoms.
hydrogen wow, right? o_0
When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy. When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy.
The sun generates energy by fusing hydrogen into helium. Eventually it will run out of hydrogen. However, this won't happen for several billion years.
In a sense. The sun produces energy by fusing hydrogen into helium in its core. In about 5 billion years that hydrogen will burn out. Over the following two billion years the sun will fuse helium in the core and hydrogen in a surrounding shell before shedding its outer remnants and leaving behind a degenerate remnant called a white dwarf.
No. The Sun doesn't "burn" anything; it fuses hydrogen to create helium, and vast quantities of energy. Propane is what powers your gas barbecue. The Sun is powered by nuclear explosions.
The sun is using up its supply of hydrogen because the hydrogen atoms are being converted into helium atoms. Only seven tenths of one percent of the available hydrogen actually converts into heat energy, and the best estimate is that it will take another one hundred billion years for all the hydrogen to be used up. So, at the end of one hundred billion years, the sun will, in fact, burn out.