Our sun emits mostly visible and ultra-violet radiation
Mainly electromagnetic radiation - this includes light.
What type of energy you get from the star?
The densest stars are neutron stars; these are "dead stars", in the sense that they ran out of fuel and no longer convert energy. However, they still have a large amount of energy left over from the collapse, which they gradually emit.
No. Stars emit light.
OF course... the same reason other stars shine in space, they're stars! They have continuous nuclear reactions that emit TONS of light and energy.
Stars emit light they do not acquire it
Stars use nuclear fusion of hydrogen to helium to create the energy they emit.
Stars, satellites, and something else
solar energy.
No. Red stars emit less energy so they are cooler than hotter blue stars.
spectroscope!
The densest stars are neutron stars; these are "dead stars", in the sense that they ran out of fuel and no longer convert energy. However, they still have a large amount of energy left over from the collapse, which they gradually emit.
Because they emit energy themselves due to various chemical reactions on their surface or core. Planets, on other hand reflect the energy from the stars.
natural infrared radiation, and man-made radio energy
The densest stars are neutron stars; these are "dead stars", in the sense that they ran out of fuel and no longer convert energy. However, they still have a large amount of energy left over from the collapse, which they gradually emit.
They emit: gamma rays, radio waves, and x-rays. Some stars emit T.V. rays
No. Stars emit light.
Uranium don't emit directly heat; under nuclear fission the kinetic energy released and the energy of radiations is converted to heat and after to electricity.
You might be referring to radio astronomy.