Sunlight doesn't give off gas. It's energy - from the fusion of H2 molecules to form He - in the form of photons.
If you're referring to the gas inside the sun, it's diatomic molecules of Hydrogen and Helium.
The sun emits a continuous spectrum, which includes all wavelengths of light across the electromagnetic spectrum. This spectrum results from the thermal radiation of the sun's surface.
Comets are made of frozen gases and ice so when they get too close to the sun the gas and ice evaporate. As they orbit around the sun, the comet forms a tail, and the evaporation causes it to burn and give off light. I wouldn't call it "emitting" light though, because I think that to emit light, the object should be creating the light on its own. Comets don't emit light because without the sun they won't burn in the first place.
oxygen
Like the planets, comets emit no visible light of their own-they shine by reflected (or reemitted) sunlight.
I am currently in Earth Science and according to the "Pearson Earth Science" book, YES, all volcanic eruptions emit a large amount of gas. The quantity of emitted gas can exceed thousands of tons each day
solar energy.
the sun only emit light. not the moon. it will reflect the light of the sun.
The sun emits visible light most strongly, which is the type of light that is visible to the human eye.
Large balls of gas that create and emit their own radiation are called stars. They produce energy through nuclear fusion in their cores, which generates heat and light. The Sun is an example of a star.
A gas giant is similar in composition to the Sun. The Sun is much bigger than the gas giants and it is a star not a planet, of course.
Yes it emit
gas
No. Planets do not emit light; they can only reflect light from the Sun.
A gas heated to millions of degrees would emit X-rays.
The sun emits a continuous spectrum, which includes all wavelengths of light across the electromagnetic spectrum. This spectrum results from the thermal radiation of the sun's surface.
Yes.
Yes, gas giants like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune emit more energy than they receive from the sun. This excess energy is primarily due to the planets' internal heat sources, including residual heat from their formation and energy generated by processes like gravitational contraction.