Sure, you can get a tan from it, since the Sun is a big fusion power reactor. In the near future we will be able to build fusion reactors here on Earth. Google "ITER" to see how it's going. In the meantime I suppose you can say the fusion power is actually solar energy.
No, the impact energy of a meteor is all from kinetic energy, nothing nuclear is involved.
The energy of the Sun is produced by nuclear fusion - the fusion of hydrogen into helium.
The Sun energy is from hydrogen fusion.
nuclear fusion make more energy and they both make energy and have waste products
The process generating solar energy is one of nuclear fusion.
This is produced by nuclear fusion
Nuclear fusion and hydrogen.
No, the impact energy of a meteor is all from kinetic energy, nothing nuclear is involved.
The energy of the Sun is produced by nuclear fusion - the fusion of hydrogen into helium.
The sun's energy is produced by nuclear fusion (not fission) at the core of the sun.
Because the process whereby the star produces energy is nuclear fusion, hydrogen becomes helium with release of energy
Nuclear fusion
The energy was basically there since the beginning of the Universe, i.e., the Big Bang. The Sun converts the energy through a process called nuclear fusion.
No Strontium is produced by nuclear fission not fusion.
Yes, fusion is exothermic until nickel & iron are produced.
Nuclear fusion produces nuclear energy
No, in fact sunlight is produced by nuclear fusion, not directly but from the heat produced which makes the outer layer of the sun incandescent