No place, we have not yet determined how to make a fusion reactor. Only fusion bombs.
No, a nuclear power plant producing electricity is an example of nuclear fission, not fusion. In nuclear fission, the nucleus of an atom is split, releasing energy, whereas in nuclear fusion, atomic nuclei combine to release energy.
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.
Yes, but on earth we are limited in size
Nuclear fusion is the process that powers stars, such as our sun.
Nuclear fusion in the sun occurs when hydrogen atoms combine to form helium atoms. This process releases large amounts of energy in the form of photons. The intense pressure and temperature in the sun's core create the conditions necessary for nuclear fusion to occur.
No, because the highest amount of energy needed in a nuclear fusion is 40,000,000 K, which is only known to occur on the sun.
The temperature required for nuclear fusion to occur is around 100 million degrees Celsius.
nuclear fusion is not a natural occurrence, it is when two atoms are fused together
No, a nuclear power plant producing electricity is an example of nuclear fission, not fusion. In nuclear fission, the nucleus of an atom is split, releasing energy, whereas in nuclear fusion, atomic nuclei combine to release energy.
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In the cores of stars and hydrogen bombs.
Sun
Because the conditions of temperature and pressure that occur in stars do not occur on earth
yes nuclear fusion does occur on the sun, creating intense heat and light
they have never built one
It has to be at hundreds of millions of degrees kelvin, before a fusion reaction between deuterium and tritium will start
There is very little similarity between present day power plants which use nuclear fission, and any possible nuclear fusion plant of the future