Fusion most often takes place in the cores of stars, including our Sun, where extreme temperatures and pressures allow hydrogen atoms to combine into helium, releasing vast amounts of energy. In our solar system, the Sun is the primary site of fusion. Other stars outside our solar system also undergo fusion, but within our solar system, the Sun is the sole example.
Fusion reactions occur in the cores of stars, including our Sun, where temperatures are extremely high, on the order of millions of degrees Celsius. No other location in the solar system has temperatures high enough to sustain fusion reactions.
If you are asking where does solar nuclear fusion take place, then that would be at the core of stars.
It all comes from thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen inside the sun.
The process generating solar energy is one of nuclear fusion.
The primary source of energy in our solar system is the Sun. It generates heat and light through nuclear fusion, which impacts all the other celestial bodies in the system. Other sources of energy within the solar system, such as geothermal energy on certain planets or moons, are secondary to the Sun's influence.
The only fusion going on in our solar system is in the sun
well...
Yes, in the sun.
Sun
Within the solar system, the only place where mass would be affected is inside the sun. There, thermonuclear fusion could convert some of the mass to energy.
There is no such place as "eath" in the solar system.
The Earth comes seventh place in the solar system.
The Sun is in the center of our solar system.
The sun is at the center of the solar system.
A binerary star system
Nuclear fusion.
flare, fusion, falling star, frequency