No. The sun's core has a temperature of tens of millions of degrees, far hotter than any liquid. Instead it is made of highly compressed plasma.
No, because it doesn't have a two part core
No. It has a solid core, surrounded by a fluid outer core, surrounded by a partially melted core, but its relatively small (20%) compared to the earths (50%).
in its core there is molten iron
The innermost layer, the inner core, is very hot but not molten.
Fusion at the core of the sun is the process that gives the sun its energy. Fusion is the same process found in the explosion of a hydrogen bomb.
No, because it doesn't have a two part core
Earth has a two-part core. The outer portion is molten while the inner portion is solid.
No it does not, the molten core inside the Earth is what drives plate tectonics. The Sun has nothing to do with the process.
Part of it is. The outer core is molten while the inner core is solid.
No. It has a solid core, surrounded by a fluid outer core, surrounded by a partially melted core, but its relatively small (20%) compared to the earths (50%).
The outer core is the only molten layer of the Earth. == ==
Yes! The molten iron and nickel in the outer core is spinning.
The inner core is solid due to pressure. With less pressure on it, the outer core is liquid.
No. Only the outer core is molten.
Convection currents in the Earth's molten core are thought to be responsible for causing Earth's magnetic field.
Maria is latin for sea. They are actually large basaltic lava flows from the period when the moon still had a molten core.
The only forces that act on the earth's plates are the Sun, the Moon and the molten inner core of the earth itself.