true?
No, nuclear fusion does not occur in the convection zone of a star. Fusion reactions primarily take place in the core region of a star, where the temperature and pressure are high enough to sustain the nuclear reactions that power the star. The convection zone is a region of the star where heat is transported through the movement of gas, but fusion does not occur there.
Fusion reactions occur in the core of stars, where high temperatures and pressures allow hydrogen atoms to collide and merge to form helium. This process releases a tremendous amount of energy in the form of light and heat.
Wipeout Fusion happened in 2002.
Because when a fusion reaction occurs a hydrogen atom collides with another proton, releasing energy and creating a helium nuclei. This will then collide with another proton, releasing more energy and the next atoms in the periodic table. This continues to happen as a chain-reaction similar to dominoes.
it happened like normal hurricanes happen, but instead of getting smaller when hitting land, it somehow got bigger, scientists are working it out.
core and radiation
your eye would explode
No, nuclear fusion does not occur in the convection zone of a star. Fusion reactions primarily take place in the core region of a star, where the temperature and pressure are high enough to sustain the nuclear reactions that power the star. The convection zone is a region of the star where heat is transported through the movement of gas, but fusion does not occur there.
Fusion reactions occur in the core of stars, where high temperatures and pressures allow hydrogen atoms to collide and merge to form helium. This process releases a tremendous amount of energy in the form of light and heat.
Wipeout Fusion happened in 2002.
Metroid Fusion happened in 2002.
Dark Fusion happened in 1988.
It happen when it happen
Dancing Stage Fusion happened in 2004.
Fusion - video game - happened in 1989.
Because when a fusion reaction occurs a hydrogen atom collides with another proton, releasing energy and creating a helium nuclei. This will then collide with another proton, releasing more energy and the next atoms in the periodic table. This continues to happen as a chain-reaction similar to dominoes.
If fusion reactions suddenly ceased in the sun, the energy production that sustains the sun's heat and light would stop. This would cause the sun to cool and shrink, leading to a decrease in its brightness and energy output. Eventually, the sun would become a white dwarf, a dense and cooling remnant of a once active star.