Hydrogen atoms are fusing into helium atoms in the Sun's core through the process of nuclear fusion. This fusion reaction releases a tremendous amount of energy that powers the Sun and produces light and heat.
This phenomenon is called an aurora, where charged particles from the sun collide with Earth's atmosphere. The collisions excite atoms in the atmosphere, causing them to emit light and create colorful displays in the sky near the poles.
five hundred and sixty eight
In the Sun, hydrogen nuclei are fused together to form helium in a process called nuclear fusion. This fusion process releases a large amount of energy in the form of light and heat, which powers the Sun and sustains its brightness.
Essentially the sun is a thermoNuclear furnace, a fusion reactor which is turning Hydrogen into Helium. The cycle begins when two protons collide to form a deuteron whilst also releasing a neutrino and a positron.
Hydrogen. The temperatures and pressures are big enough for these atoms to collide or fuse together to make helium. This "nuclear fusion" give of loads of energy.
I think you mean nuclear fusion, the reaction that powers the sun.
The sun is just a huge ball of hydrogen and helium. The heat created on the sun is from billions of hydrogen atoms smelting together to helium atoms. All these atoms are held together by the gravity.
Golf Wang. :)
Nuclear fusion for example two hydrogen atoms collide to form a helium atom and energy
they were discovered when the sun was made. when atoms fuse together in the sun that creates solar flares and more gas in the sun
When hydrogen atoms fuse together in the sun's core, they create helium. This process releases energy in the form of light and heat, which provides the sun's power.
Charged particles stream out from the sun after a sunstorm at supersonic speed. They collide with atoms of oxygen and nitrogen in our ionosphere to produce the colors.
Helium is an element, and, as such, is made up of no chemical 'compounds'. In a chemical sense, Helium can be said to comprise only of single helium atoms, but, on a sub-atomic level, it comprises, as do all other atoms, of protons, electrons and neutrons.
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.
Green is given off when charged particles from the sun collide with atoms of oxygen in the earth's ionosphere.
Energy in the sun is created through nuclear fusion, a process where hydrogen atoms combine to form helium, releasing a tremendous amount of energy in the form of light and heat. This process involves high temperatures and pressures in the sun's core, where hydrogen nuclei collide and fuse together to produce energy.