The Sun burns approximately 600 million tons of hydrogen per second. This equates to about 4.3 billion tons of hydrogen burned in a single day.
Hydrogen is the fuel used by the sun, helium is the waste produced by hydrogen use in the fusion process
About 74% of the Sun's mass is hydrogen. This element is essential for nuclear fusion reactions that power the Sun, converting hydrogen into helium and releasing energy in the process.
helium is the gas which makes most of the sun
hydrogen.
The Sun burns approximately 600 million tons of hydrogen per second. This equates to about 4.3 billion tons of hydrogen burned in a single day.
No. The sun is about 75% hydrogen.
yes
its a secret
The expectation is that some day in the (to us) far future, most of the hydrogen in the sun will have been converted to helium (and higher weight atoms). At that point, the sun will be "exhausted" since the energy of the sun comes primarily from the fusion of the hydrogen - when there is no hydrogen left to fuse, the sun will have run out of "fuel".
The Sun is about 70% hydrogen.
The Sun is three quarters hydrogen one quarter helium. (Trace amounts of other gases are also present.)
no hydrogen is not affected by the sun because hydrogen can be combined with helium it creates a fuel source but it is not affected by hydrogen by it self so no hydrogen is not affected by the sun
Hydrogen fusion. The hydrogen atoms in the core of the sun are under such intense pressure that they combine to form helium and energy.
In about 6 billion years. Wear a jacket, it will be cold that day :)
Hydrogen and Helium. Also comprised of a core of much heavier elements, all the elements in the universe heavier than hydrogen probably came from supernovae.
The Sun is composed of about 71% hydrogen by mass. This makes hydrogen the most abundant element in the Sun.