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nothing would happen, the sun is constantly going through nuclear reactions
No, the nuclear reactions are at the sun's core. It glows because the outer layers are at about 6000 degC and therefore it is incandescent
No. The sun glows because of nuclear fusion that takes place in its core.
neutron star
The heat and light emitted from the sun comes from the nuclear reactions that occur on it.
the suns nuclear reactions happen at extreme temperatures we do it at lower temps
nothing would happen, the sun is constantly going through nuclear reactions
The sun's nuclear reactions are fusion reactions at extremely high temperatures and pressures, while the nuclear reactor's nuclear reactions are fission reactions at typical temperatures and pressures for earth.
The nuclear reactions are all over the sun but between core and surface the central part observes more.
The energy output of the Sun derives from nuclear fusion reactions. A yellow dwarf is not a process, it's a type of star, of which the Sun is one.
nuclear reactions at its core
These are not chemical reactions but thermonuclear reactions.
No, the nuclear reactions are at the sun's core. It glows because the outer layers are at about 6000 degC and therefore it is incandescent
The nuclear reactions in the Suns core
Nuclear reaction inside the Sun is fusing of Hydrogen to Helium and release out thermal energy.
No. The sun glows because of nuclear fusion that takes place in its core.
No, the sun's energy comes from nuclear fusion reactions