At the center, both the temperature and the pressure are highest. Both a high pressure and a high temperature increase the likelihood of fusion.
mostly Hydro
Geothermal energy continually flows outward from within the earth. This heat energy comes mostly from the core, where temperature may reach 7000°C. The earth's crust is 5 to 75 km thick, and the heat can be used as an energy source where it is available near the surface because there is a thin crust or a fracture zone.
Electrical energy is mostly generated at the same time as it is used, in other words, all the time 24/7/365. Electricity for powering our homes is generated in power stations.
How are large currents created?
We mostly see and use electrical energy in our daily lives, as it powers our devices, appliances, and lighting. This energy is generated from various sources such as fossil fuels, renewable energy, or nuclear power.
Humans mostly use electrical energy generated from various sources such as fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas), nuclear power, and renewable sources (solar, wind, hydropower). This energy is used for lighting, heating, transportation, and powering electronic devices.
This happens mostly in the core - near the center of the Sun, where temperature and pressure are greatest.
According to US Energy Information Administration data for 2009, solar energy (based on electricity net generation kilowatthour billion figures) accounted for just 0.2% of total renewable electricity generated in 2009 and just 0.02% of total electricity generated in 2009. All renewable sources (mostly sourced from hydroelectric) accounted for 10.7% of total electricity generated.
Mostly by wind blowing across the water's surface.
by oxygen or carbon dioxide mostly fishes swim in the surface of the water so they could get energy without getting energy they could die
According to US Energy Information Administration data for 2009, geothermal energy (based on electricity net generation kilowatthour billion figures) accounted for 3.58% of total renewable electricity generated in the USA in 2009 and just 0.38% of total electricity generated in 2009. All renewable sources (mostly sourced from hydroelectric, geothermal and wind) accounted for 10.7% of total electricity generated.
The surface of earth is covered mostly by water.