Right now, hydrogen is fusing into hydrogen. As the hydrogen gets used up, helium will begin fusing into the next heavier element. When the helium is about used up, the next heavier element will begin fusing into the next . . . . well, keep on going until you get iron as the result of fusing. The Sun has not enough pressure and heat to fuse iron into anything heavier, and the Sun will blossom out into a red giant. Of course, this is billions of years from now . . .
It makes up the majority of the molten core of the earth.
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.
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)
Based on the physical properties of the earth;The core is divided into outer core and inner core.the liquid layer of the earth core is the outer core,while the inner core is solid.
The liquid layer of the Earth's core is called the outer core.
When hydrogen is fused in the suns core Helium is produced.
There are several elements found in the sun's core. Some of these include helium, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, iron, silicon, sulfur, and others.
helium and hydrogen
v.hot
In the Sun's core.
In the Sun's core.
In the core
At the core where the fuel is burning
Core of the sun.
the suns energy is generated at its core. The energy that is produced by the sun is generated by fusion.
No it is not, however it is similar to that of the sun's surface
"The core is made of hot, dense gas in the plasmic state"