it keeps the sun alive
No. The sun is made up of a ball of gases, and the only radioactive gas we know of is Radon. Also, most radioactive elements are man-made.
yes.light is necessary for projecting radio or radioactive rays.the sun is a nuclear power plant which consists of both atomic and sub-atomic particles and also being radioactive the answer to me would seem to be yes.
Uranium is a metal, solid and radioactive at room temperature.
It looks like a volcano. +++ No it doesn't. A volcano is in rock. The Sun (or any similar star) is a ball of extremely hot, radioactive, gas.
Your question is unintelligible. There is no "radioactive zone" defined as part of the Sun.
it keeps the sun alive
No. The sun is made up of a ball of gases, and the only radioactive gas we know of is Radon. Also, most radioactive elements are man-made.
The core of the earth is radioactive, as is the sun. Granites, which crystallize from mantle material are commonly slightly radioactive.
Yes. The Sun is powered by the process of Nuclear Fusion and it does output radioactive energy, mainly in the form of electromagnetic radiation.
No, deuterium is stable. It is Tritium that is radioactive.
The cast of The Extremely Tall Tale of Radioactive Sun - 2011 includes: Kelsey Burcher Abigail Kaczmarek
No. The Sun is powered by nuclear fusion, primarily of hydrogen into helium. Radioactive decay is sort of the reverse process, in which a heavy element will break down into lighter ones.
Most of the energy we use can be traced to the Sun in one way or another, but not all of it. Energy from nuclear sources does not come from the Sun. It comes from the heat produced as a result of decay of radioactive isotopes. While the Sun does create radioactive isotopes in its interior, that is not the source of the isotopes available to us on the Earth today. Our radioactive isotopes came from other stars that exploded billions of years ago, before the Earth and the Sun were formed.
core, radioactive zone, convection zone
Radioactive and solar energy (or light and heat).
No. It's radioactive decay within the planet.