the sun is where the temperature is high enough
Nuclear fusion occurs in the solar core.
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.
Nuclear fusion takes place in the core of the Sun, where the extreme pressure and temperature cause hydrogen atoms to fuse into helium. This process releases energy in the form of heat and light, powering the Sun and providing heat and light to our solar system.
Venus.
It all comes from thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen inside the sun.
Nuclear fusion occurs in the solar core.
The only fusion going on in our solar system is in the sun
well...
Yes, in the sun.
Sun
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.
No, the Solar System had a long way to go to become a binary star system. If Jupiter had been twice the mass, it's interior would have had enough pressure and high enough temperature to generate nuclear fusion, and it would have become a dwarf sun.Even so, Jupiter radiates more heat than it receives from the sun.
Nuclear fusion takes place in the core of the Sun, where the extreme pressure and temperature cause hydrogen atoms to fuse into helium. This process releases energy in the form of heat and light, powering the Sun and providing heat and light to our solar system.
Fusion takes place in the core, where the temperature and pressure are the highest.
A binerary star system
Nuclear fusion.
flare, fusion, falling star, frequency