Its mainly going to be Hydrogen nuclii. At the suns core, two protons fuse together (hydrogen atom nuclei) to form deuterium. These in turn may fuse with further protons, or with another deuterium nuclei to for a helium nuclei. As the heavier nuclei form, energy is released.
Later on in the Stars life, fusion of the helium nuclii may take place a lot more often, as the preferred fuel of Hydrogen is depleted.
A green plant uses light energy from the sun to produce chemical energy in the form of glucose through the process of photosynthesis.
chloroplast
In the definition, sun is a star because it produces its own light and heat. How does it produce such great energy? It uses hydrogen. Hydrogen is the element which is abundand in the sun in order to produce solar energy.
Nope. it just uses the sun rays to produce glucose
Chloroplast in plant cells absorbs the sun's energy and uses it for photosynthesis to produce sugar and oxygen.
The sun produce light and nuclear energy
the energy sun and stars produce is fusion.
Photosynthesis is the biochemical process that uses energy from the sun to produce oxygen. This process takes place in plants, algae, and some bacteria, where they convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen with the help of sunlight.
Photosynthesis is the process that uses carbon dioxide and the sun's radiant energy to produce chemical energy in the form of glucose. This process occurs in the chloroplasts of plant cells and involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy.
The Sun is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium, with smaller amounts of heavier elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. These elements undergo nuclear fusion in the Sun's core to produce energy and light.
satellites produce energy by the sun
No, not at all. What you've described is photosynthesis, which is a completely different thing.