White dwarfs are too cool for nuclear fusion to take place.
If you are asking where does solar nuclear fusion take place, then that would be at the core of stars.
Nuclear fusion does not currently occur in nuclear plants. Nuclear plants use nuclear fission, where atoms are split to release energy. Fusion reactions, in which atomic nuclei combine to release energy, are not yet used commercially for electricity generation.
I could answer is the question was more specific.
Fusion takes place in the core, where the temperature and pressure are much higher, which is necessary for fusion.
The only place in which nuclear FUSION takes place is in stars (the sun included), and in the detonation of a hyndrogen bomb. If you are asking about nuclear FISSION (an entirely different process), restate the question.
Nuclear fusion takes place in the core of the sun.
If you are asking where does solar nuclear fusion take place, then that would be at the core of stars.
In nuclear fusion reaction two nuclei are combined by providing the energy.
Nuclear fusion does not currently occur in nuclear plants. Nuclear plants use nuclear fission, where atoms are split to release energy. Fusion reactions, in which atomic nuclei combine to release energy, are not yet used commercially for electricity generation.
Nuclear fusion of hydrogen isotopes take place to form helium.
Nuclear fusion is the type of nuclear reaction that occurs in stars. Older stars with a collapsing center can exceed a temperature of one hundred million Kelvin.
None.
Fusion
nuclear fusion
Yes, they have accomplished nuclear fusion in a lab in Princeton.
When the outer envelope of a red giant recedes, the remaining carbon core is called a white dwarf. This core is extremely hot and dense, with no nuclear fusion taking place.
Nuclear fusion naturally takes place in the core of stars, where high temperatures and pressures allow hydrogen atoms to combine and release energy.