By thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen, producing helium. The same process that produces the energy in a hydrogen bomb (although the sun fuses far more hydrogen in the same period of time than the largest hydrogen bomb ever speculated would fuse during its entire explosion, thus producing more energy than such a bomb).
The energy in the Sun is primarily produced in the core, where nuclear fusion reactions convert hydrogen into helium, releasing vast amounts of energy in the process. This energy then travels outward through the Sun's layers before being emitted as sunlight into space.
The Core
the core
Inside the Sun - in the core - energy is produced. This keeps the Sun hot, producing the radiation which we see.Inside the Sun - in the core - energy is produced. This keeps the Sun hot, producing the radiation which we see.Inside the Sun - in the core - energy is produced. This keeps the Sun hot, producing the radiation which we see.Inside the Sun - in the core - energy is produced. This keeps the Sun hot, producing the radiation which we see.
Nuclear fusion is taking place in the Sun's core that makes the solar energy. Hope this helped! :)
Nuclear fusion in the sun's core, where Hydrogen-1 is converted to Helium-4 plus energy.
Energy is produced in the sun's core through nuclear fusion, where hydrogen atoms combine to form helium, releasing a tremendous amount of energy in the process. The high temperatures and pressures in the core of the sun provide the conditions necessary for nuclear fusion to occur.
True. Energy in the form of light and heat is produced in the sun's core through nuclear fusion, where hydrogen atoms combine to form helium, releasing a tremendous amount of energy in the process.
The Sun's structure consists of a core where nuclear fusion occurs, releasing energy in the form of light and heat. This energy gradually moves outward from the core through radiation and convection processes. The energy produced in the core is transferred to the Sun's surface, where it is emitted as sunlight.
This happens mostly in the core - near the center of the Sun, where temperature and pressure are greatest.
Energy in the form of light and heat is produced in the sun's core through nuclear fusion reactions. This energy then moves outwards through the radiative zone and convective zone before reaching the sun's surface (photosphere) and being emitted as sunlight.
The layer that surrounds the core of the Sun is called the Puenelsome. Here is where Nitrogen gets converted into nuclear energy.