Plasma is a highly energetic state of matter, where some or all of the electrons are stripped away, creating a positively charged miasma. Plasma temporarily comes into existence during lightning strikes, but in general, it is not a natural state of matter within planetary cores, where there is generally insufficient heat to create such a state.
Yes, plasma IS a science word! there is solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Although plasma is not of this world. It can only be found on other planets.
This is because when the big bang theory was in it session it made a big plasma wave that had moved the compositions of every planet depending on its distance .
If you define the "visible universe" as objects emitting light or electromagnetic radiation that can be seen or visualized from earth, then plasma makes up essentially all of it.In our solar system, the sun which is more massive than all the planets is made up almost entirely of plasma. Of course, the planets with perhaps the exception of the gas giants are made up of normal matter. But, they are just a tiny drop in the universe. We are unable to see planets in any of the other billions of solar systems. A few planets have been postulated, but are essentially invisible from earth.Even if we assumed every star had planets like our sun, the mass of these planets would be negligible.If you include all the blackness of space, then it is probably mostly void of matter, although the matter that is there would still be ions and plasma.
A star is a ball of plasma : life as we know it cannot exist there.
Through intense research it has indicated that stars are not only luminous balls of plasma held by gravity, but are also planets from different galaxies. From a distance, they may seem like stars, but are in fact planets. So yes, you are correct, planets are stars from different galaxies.
I think you mean, planetary nebula. They are balls of gas and plasma. The name originated with their discovery in the 1700s because of they looked similar to planets when viewed through small telescopes. They are not related to the planets of the solar system.
Stars, interstellar medium, solar wind (which is the interplanetary medium). Flourescent and neon lights also use/contain plasma. Lightning is a plasma. The upper atmosphere and ionosphere have plasma. The Van Allen Belts are plasma traps in the magnetosphere of the Earth. On other planets these are called plasmaspheres. The definition of a plasma is a gas of charged particles. So all of these places have hot gases that are hot enough to separate the electrons from the nuclei and thus generate a gas of charged particles. Unless you mean "plasma in the blood" and then I don't know.
No, the sun is not a terrestrial planet. It is a star, a massive ball of plasma that generates energy through nuclear fusion. Terrestrial planets, like Earth, are small, rocky planets that orbit the sun.
Usually, the core of a planet will be either molten or solid rock, or plasma of some sort. Depends on the planet and it's closeness to it's sun.
The sun is a star that emits light and heat, while the eight planets are celestial bodies that orbit around it. The planets are primarily composed of rock or gas, while the sun is made up mostly of hydrogen and helium. The planets have various sizes, compositions, and atmospheres, while the sun is much larger and mainly consists of plasma.
Pluto's thin atmosphere does contain some amount of ionized gas, or plasma, but not on the same scale as planets with more substantial atmospheres like Earth. The solar wind compresses and interacts with Pluto's atmosphere, creating regions of ionized gases.
Stars, planets, moons, and asteroids are four types of celestial bodies found in space. Stars are massive luminous spheres of plasma, planets are large bodies orbiting around stars, moons are natural satellites orbiting planets, and asteroids are small rocky bodies that orbit the Sun.