The core.
Nuclear Fusion
The suns core is the innermost portion or the photosphere of the sun. It's the hottest layer and under the highest pressure, enabling nuclear fusion to take place, which produces the energy. The suns core temperature is estimated to be around 13.6 million degrees Kelvin.
The earth's atmosphere is not hot enough for thermonuclear fusion to take place.
The Convective Zone is where all of the sun's internal movements take place. This is the thickest layer of the sun.
Nuclear fission is the splitting of the nucleus of an element, it only happens to certain ones, most often Uranium 235 but also Plutonium 239. It does not take place in the sun at all, the sun is powered by nuclear fusion which is the joining together of hydrogen nuclei to form helium.
All I know is that it's either the core, chromosphere, convection layer, or the corona. Which one is it?
The Sun's fusion takes place in the core. The Convective zone brings heat to the surface by thermal convection, which is basically hot plasma coming up to the surface, then cooling and sinking.
If you are asking where does solar nuclear fusion take place, then that would be at the core of stars.
Nuclear fusion of hydrogen isotopes take place to form helium.
Fusion takes place in the core of the sun.
The suns core is the innermost portion or the photosphere of the sun. It's the hottest layer and under the highest pressure, enabling nuclear fusion to take place, which produces the energy. The suns core temperature is estimated to be around 13.6 million degrees Kelvin.
Around the core of helium that been formed from hydrogen fusion.
Fusion takes place in the core, where the temperature and pressure are much higher, which is necessary for fusion.
The Layer of the sun's interior where energy is transderred mainly my electromagnetic radiation is cheese and llamas. Just kidding. It is nuclear fusion. -katie k bye
Nuclear Fusion
Neclear Fusion because stars are powered by that, even our sun
Neclear Fusion because stars are powered by that, even our sun