Well, darling, the sun is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium, not your grandma's jewelry collection. And even if by some miracle there was gold on the sun, trying to retrieve it would be like trying to fry an egg with a snowball - impossible and downright nonsensical.
The color that would most likely represent Apollo would be gold or yellow. He does represent the sun, and the sun is gold. Also, his chariot is golden.
Nuking the sun is not possible with current technology. However, theoretically, if it were possible, the sun is so massive that a nuclear explosion would have negligible impact on it. The sun's nuclear fusion reactions are much more powerful than any man-made nuclear explosion.
On the sun, your age would be the same as it is on Earth, as age is determined by the passage of time. However, due to the intense heat and radiation on the sun, living there would not be possible for humans.
There is gold in the sun, but it is not feasible to extract it. The sun's core is where gold is formed through nuclear fusion, but the extreme heat and pressure make it impossible for us to access or extract it.
The sun does not contain real gold. The sun is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium, with traces of other elements. Gold is formed in the intense heat and pressure of supernova explosions, not in the core of the sun.
The planets orbit the sun.
Use the sun to shine on it shininess and it will work.
The color that would most likely represent Apollo would be gold or yellow. He does represent the sun, and the sun is gold. Also, his chariot is golden.
it IS possible.... because you would see the North Star and know where you are.
Nuking the sun is not possible with current technology. However, theoretically, if it were possible, the sun is so massive that a nuclear explosion would have negligible impact on it. The sun's nuclear fusion reactions are much more powerful than any man-made nuclear explosion.
On the sun, your age would be the same as it is on Earth, as age is determined by the passage of time. However, due to the intense heat and radiation on the sun, living there would not be possible for humans.
No. This is not at all possible. There is no solid surface on the sun and we would burn to ash far before we reach the photosphere. The gaseous surface of the sun is extensively hot, in the order of 10,000°F.
This could easily be possible but as the sun is continually expanding i imagine that in a matter of time t would be sucked in and burned inside the sun
From an amazing thing called photosynthesis. Which would not be possible without the sun.
no, it would burn up and turn into ash
it's not possible because if there would be no heat no warm it would get cold so it's not possible just think deep about it and u'll know the full answer
There is gold in the sun, but it is not feasible to extract it. The sun's core is where gold is formed through nuclear fusion, but the extreme heat and pressure make it impossible for us to access or extract it.