Yes and No. The Sun is a large nuclear fusion reactor. Also, all of our energy ultimately, in one form or another, comes from the Sun, or from the remnants of the accretion process that created the Sun and Solar System.
More technically correct, however, is the statement that nuclear energy comes from the release of binding energy (Strong Atomic Force) within the nucleus of atoms.
Yes. The Sun's energy comes from nuclear fusion of Hydrogen into Helium.
nuclear energy
The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.
is to hepl people if there is no electricity because the energy of it is come from the heat of the sun
The sun's energy is produced by nuclear fusion (not fission) at the core of the sun.
99.9% of Earth's energy comes from the Sun. It is usual, especially in the natural water cycle for the energy to evaporate water to come from the Sun. Of course you could also use the heat from a nuclear reactor.
nuclear energy
Because all the energy on and in the Earth will have come, in one form or another, from the Sun. e.g. coal will have form from plants that only grew because of the Sun's energy. However, when considering nuclear power, atoms did not come from the Sun and nuclear energy is not due to the Sun.
The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.The Sun gets its energy from nuclear fusion.
From the nuclear fusion reaction in the sun
is to hepl people if there is no electricity because the energy of it is come from the heat of the sun
Most energy comes from sun through the nuclear fusion energy.
The sun's energy is produced by nuclear fusion (not fission) at the core of the sun.
Nuclear bombs, nuclear power plants, the sun.
The sun generates its energy via nuclear fusion of hydrogen at the solar core into helium. This energy is sent outward in the form of solar radiation.
99.9% of Earth's energy comes from the Sun. It is usual, especially in the natural water cycle for the energy to evaporate water to come from the Sun. Of course you could also use the heat from a nuclear reactor.
The only energy we use that doesn't come from the sun is nuclear energy.Any other form of energy, if you track it back far enough, started in the sun.(And it was nuclear energy while it was there.)
Hydro power did originate from the sun. The energy required to transport water from the lower level to the higher level thus increasing its potential energy required the sun to heat it. Even ocean tidal and wind power also originated at the sun. Gravitational forces causing tides relies on the sun.