About 10 billion years, last check
Unexpected
I just had a Cervical Fusion C-5 and C-6. It is possible to stay in but due to the stresses it puts on adjacent discs it is not likely you would stay much longer if at all.
They will last much longer in the Caribbean because they don't much factories and what not polluting the sky, therefore, acidprecipitation wouldn't occur as much, this results in lesscorrosion and/or rust.
six months
It certainly can. It can also occur at lower or higher temperatures. 15 MK is roughly the core temperature of the Sun. At this temperature the PP chain is dominant, with the CNO cycle contributing roughly an order of magnitude less energy. At around 17 MK the two are roughly equal, and at higher temperatures the CNO cycle becomes dominant. Much below 4 MK, you're not normally going to get significant fusion (there are "cold fusion" techniques that can happen at much lower temperatures, such as muon-catalysed fusion, but these aren't net producers of energy: it takes more energy to make the muons than you can get out of the resultant fusion reaction).
well it occurs in the core of the sun, and it travels because it is shot out of the sun because it has too much pressure.
All stars "burn" by the process of nuclear fusion. When fusion has been completed, the star dies. That can occur in several different ways and the interested party could look into the topic of stellar evolution. Neutron stars, black holes and white dwarfs are examples of end stages of stellar evolution. Some stars never really reach the stage of fusion and such large objects are called brown dwarfs. If Jupiter were not a planet, it might be deemed a brown dwarf.
It is free
Because they found that the war was lasting much longer than expected, casualties were mounting, and they simply needed more men.
about 5 million times a second however being a fierce fire power is very modest destiny of the heat generated per gallon
no
It requires almost as much energy to create nuclear fusion as the energy it creates. :)