Yep, you got it.
The entire sun does it. As long is it is hot enough, it will be causing nuclear fusion.
The Sun is hot because it is converting Hydrogen into Helium by nuclear fusion.
Nuclear fusion in the center of the Sun heats it up.Nuclear fusion in the center of the Sun heats it up.Nuclear fusion in the center of the Sun heats it up.Nuclear fusion in the center of the Sun heats it up.
Yes, the sun is a nuclear fusion reactor.
If you are asking where does solar nuclear fusion take place, then that would be at the core of stars.
It gets the energy from nuclear fusion. It is able to carry out this nuclear fusion because of its mass, which pulls the Sun together, and keeps its core hot and dense.
What is a finalproduct of nuclear fusion in the sun
Nuclear fusion takes place in the core of the sun.
The core of the Sun is not dense or hot enough to sustain nuclear fission reactions like those in nuclear power plants. Instead, the Sun undergoes nuclear fusion, where lighter elements are combined to form heavier ones, releasing vast amounts of energy in the process. This fusion process sustains the Sun's energy output and keeps it shining.
No, while it is hot enough the pressure is too low.
Theoretically any Thermonuclear Fusion Explosions (what happens on the surface of the sun) are the same heat.
The sun is not dry, as it is a massive ball of hot plasma that emits energy through nuclear fusion.