No.
It is currently not possible to visit the sun without burning up due to its extreme heat and radiation. The surface temperature of the sun is around 5500 degrees Celsius, so any spacecraft or probe would be incinerated before getting close.
It depends on how close you want to get to the sun. Getting close to the sun is very dangerous and definitely not just because of the heat. This expitition would be extremely costly because of this with very little purpose. As well, the 150 million kilometer distance is many times the 300,000km to the moon, which was an incredible feat. Lastly (and most importantly), you could not visit the sun and then leave, you would be sucked in. The gravity on the sun is much greater due to its size.
No, it is made of solid noncombusting rock. The sun is made of the aforementioned gases.
Spacecraft can get as close as about 5 million miles to the sun without burning up, thanks to special heat shields and insulation. However, any object that gets closer to the sun would face extreme heat and radiation, which can cause it to break down or burn up.
The sun has been burning for about 4.6 billion years and is currently halfway through its life cycle. It is estimated to continue burning for another 5 billion years before it exhausts its nuclear fuel and transitions into a red giant.
It is currently not possible to visit the sun without burning up due to its extreme heat and radiation. The surface temperature of the sun is around 5500 degrees Celsius, so any spacecraft or probe would be incinerated before getting close.
Go at night...
It depends on how close you want to get to the sun. Getting close to the sun is very dangerous and definitely not just because of the heat. This expitition would be extremely costly because of this with very little purpose. As well, the 150 million kilometer distance is many times the 300,000km to the moon, which was an incredible feat. Lastly (and most importantly), you could not visit the sun and then leave, you would be sucked in. The gravity on the sun is much greater due to its size.
go at night
The Sun Is Burning was created in 1964.
No, it is made of solid noncombusting rock. The sun is made of the aforementioned gases.
they are burning hydrogen
Mars is burning hot because the atmosphere broke up so their is nothing protecting its surface from the sun's energy
The sun is burning gasses just like the stars. And just like any star, when the gas runs out, it will stop burning and disappear.
Burning Like the Midnight Sun was created in 2010.
The sun does not have enough oxygen.Strange as it seems, the sun is just too hot for burning to take place.
Nothing that you will notice in your lifetime . In millions of years, the sun , being a star will first expand , burning up the earth and then reduce and burn out.