The core.
We call them sunspots, but dark and cool are relative terms. A sunspot is dark only relative to the surrounding solar surface, but still intensely bright compared to your common household light bulb. It's cooler than the surrounding solar material, but still hot enough to vaporize a spaceship and anyone inside it in a fraction of a second.
Exploding sun is called NOVA
99.8 percent of the total mass of our solar system is the Sun, and most of the rest is Jupiter. If there were 500 planets the size of Jupiter, they would STILL all fit inside the Sun.
No, there is no life inside the Sun. The Sun is a massive ball of hot gases primarily composed of hydrogen and helium that undergoes nuclear fusion in its core. The extreme temperatures and pressures inside the Sun make it inhospitable for any form of life as we know it.
The energy which produces light and heat in the Sun comes from "nuclear fusion" deep inside the Sun.
nuclear fission
The green substance is called chlorophyll. It is a pigment found inside organelles called chloroplasts.
The nuclear reaction taking place inside the sun is called nuclear fusion. This is where hydrogen atoms combine to form helium, releasing a large amount of energy in the process.
The state of matter that exists inside the sun and other stars is called plasma. Plasma is a superheated state of matter in which atoms are stripped of their electrons, resulting in a soup of ions and free electrons.
When hydrogen atoms fuse together inside the sun, they form helium atoms through a process called nuclear fusion. This fusion process releases a tremendous amount of energy in the form of light and heat, which is what powers the sun and sustains life on Earth.
If the Sun were larger than Earth's orbit, we'd be inside it. Are we inside it? There you go.
plant cells use chloroplasts to get energy from the sun by the green pigments inside of them called chlorophyll.
We call them sunspots, but dark and cool are relative terms. A sunspot is dark only relative to the surrounding solar surface, but still intensely bright compared to your common household light bulb. It's cooler than the surrounding solar material, but still hot enough to vaporize a spaceship and anyone inside it in a fraction of a second.
if you think about it, it's in the name sun. They need to grow outside to get to the sun. but you can grow them inside to.just put them by a window that has alot of sun
the sun is a star with lots of gases inside of it
No. Nothing in the sun is alive.
it's called the inside.