The gas was in space from the beginning of the Universe - the Big Bang. Eventually, gravity pulled parts of this gas together, to make the Sun, as well as other stars.
solar prominences
The sun stays in space due to a delicate balance between two forces: gravity pulling the sun towards the center of its mass, and the outward pressure created by nuclear fusion reactions happening in its core. This balance keeps the sun stable and prevents it from collapsing or drifting away.
The sun doesn't float because it is made of gas and fire.The sun is basically a big giant ball of gas and fire.So it is impossible for the sun to float. If you think anything else wrong!
The most predominant gas in the Sun is hydrogen, making up about 75% of its mass. Helium is the next most abundant gas in the Sun, accounting for about 24% of its mass. These two gases make up the majority of the Sun's composition.
solar flares
Yes, the sun.
solar prominences
solar prominences
solar prominences
coronal mass ejection
Gas and others make the sun hot
The sun stays in space due to a delicate balance between two forces: gravity pulling the sun towards the center of its mass, and the outward pressure created by nuclear fusion reactions happening in its core. This balance keeps the sun stable and prevents it from collapsing or drifting away.
The sun doesn't float because it is made of gas and fire.The sun is basically a big giant ball of gas and fire.So it is impossible for the sun to float. If you think anything else wrong!
The most predominant gas in the Sun is hydrogen, making up about 75% of its mass. Helium is the next most abundant gas in the Sun, accounting for about 24% of its mass. These two gases make up the majority of the Sun's composition.
solar flares
A star is a burning ball of gas out in space. Saturn is a planet with rings. Uranus is also a planet. The moon is a moon - a satellite that orbits a planet. The only burning ball of gas in that list is our sun. The sun's name is actually Sol.
The sun is a large, hot sphere of gas, which condensed out of an even larger but cooler cloud of gas some five billion years ago. The position of the sun in the sky is what we see from our perspective here on Earth, but the sun is in outer space, some 93 million miles away from Earth.