Helium and hydrogen
Radiation can come in two forms: particles and waves. Radiation can come from the sun, gamma rays, UV rays, radio waves, and X-rays.
Earth and Venus come closest to each other at specific times of the year. From the earth, Venus appears to be a bright big star that flickers less than other stars.
UV wich is ultraviolet and Electromagnetic.
there are new ones every day being born..others are fizzling out.its an ongoing process that i think,will continue on and on.. No...altho the light you see will last for hundreds of years after the star is gone...nothing keeps it's form forever....
well most stars have solar systems, if they are large enough they would have a larger gravitational pull causing other planets to come in its "area" which would basically create a solar system.
xray radiation and ultraviolet radiation
xray radiation and ultraviolet radiation
Light, heat, there are some more.
light and heat...
Radiation can come in two forms: particles and waves. Radiation can come from the sun, gamma rays, UV rays, radio waves, and X-rays.
Ultraviolet Radiation,Visible Light,Infared Radiation
Not all of it, but most. Other energy may come from radioactivity within the planets, or kinetic energy from objects that come in outside of the solar system. Also small amounts of radiation can come from other stars.
They Collide and become part of another star which causes Stars to be come Parts of other Stars.
Chocolate
The ozone layer's purpose is to block and reflect light and radiation from the sun and other stars back into the universe. Some of it, obviously, is allowed to come in, however, depletion of the ozone layers causes too much of this heat to come in and raises temperatures.
It doesn't. Evolutionists say that the best explanation is that the x-rays are resonating from the big bang, but there is absolutely no proof for that statement. the radiation could come from anywhere in the universe. Gases circling black holes give of large amounts of radiation, and many stars also give off radiation.
Disaccharides are formed when two monosaccharides come together. Disaccharides can be glucose, sucrose, and many other forms of carbohydrates.