There's hydrogen at the core of the sun - that's the sun's main fuel - but earth's core is mostly iron and nickel.
No. The SUN's core is Hydrogen and Helium. The EARTH's core is Iron and Nickel.
The Earth's core contains many radioactive elements within its core that emit warmth as they decay, keeping the core of the Earth hot and heating it from within. Meanwhile, the sun is a product of the nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium and its rays warm the Earth's crust from outside.
Actually, no. But if something falls into the earth's core, and it is very heavy, like lets say for example: If a Building falls into the earths core, then the whole earth will erupt, causing the earth's core to rotate, then the earth's core will be unstable and the whole world will erupt.
through nuclear reactions that occur at the core of the sun. it radiates that energy until it reaches the earth.
I'm not sure what you mean to ask, but the sun is hotter than the core of the earth and the surface of the sun is hotter than the core of the sun. Um well the whole entire sun is hot the inner core is aprox. 27,000,000 degrees fahrenheit and the outer surface of it is hotter than the suns core because its deep inside (the core)
Both the sun and Earth both have hot cores, but those cores are different. Earth's core is made mostly iron and nickel and consists of a liquid outer core and a solid inner core. Currents in the outer core are the source of Earth's magnetic field. The sun's core, like the rest of the sun, is made mostly of hydrogen and helium. In this core, hydrogen atoms fuse together to form helium, releasing enormous amounts of energy in the process.
Hydrogen fuses into helium in the sun's core, where the high temperature and pressure conditions allow nuclear fusion reactions to occur. This process releases energy in the form of light and heat, which powers the sun and sustains life on Earth.
hydrogen
The hydrogen core provides the energy for the sun.
The core of the sun is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium atoms undergoing nuclear fusion, converting hydrogen into helium and releasing energy in the form of heat and light. This process sustains the sun's energy output and creates the conditions for supporting life on Earth.
No. The sun is already made mostly of hydrogen and is actually consuming the hydrogen in its core and turning it into helium.
Nuclear Fusion from hydrogen in it core and helium
Hydrogen is fused into helium in the core of the sun, where temperatures and pressures are high enough to initiate nuclear fusion reactions. The core is where the sun's energy is produced through the fusion of hydrogen nuclei into helium nuclei.
The sun.
We understand that hydrogen atoms are fused into helium in the sun's core.
Hydrogen and helium
hydrogen