It gradually gets converted into helium.
During hydrogen fusion, two hydrogen atoms combine to form a helium atom. This process releases a large amount of energy in the form of gamma rays and heat. The energy released from hydrogen fusion is what powers stars like our Sun.
The fusion of hydrogen nuclei in the sun produces helium, along with energy in the form of light and heat. This process is known as nuclear fusion and is the source of the sun's energy.
The sun shines because some of the nuclear energy is transformed into radiant energy. Enormous compression due to gravity and extremely high temperatures in the deep interior of the Sun fuse the nuclei of hydrogen atoms together to form helium nuclei. This is called thermonuclear fusion (a process that releases radiant energy, a small part of which reaches Earth).
The process that produces energy in our sun is called nuclear fusion. The fusion reaction combines hydrogen atoms into helium releasing a great deal of energy. The is the same processed as in the hydrogen bomb.
The energy in the sun is released through nuclear fusion. This process involves the fusion of hydrogen atoms to form helium, releasing large amounts of energy in the form of heat and light.
Yes you can make hydrogen from water through electrolysis. And also from helium (this happens in the sun)
Nuclear fusion, in which hydrogen-1 is fused into helium-4.
stuff happens Hydrogen atoms need nearly 30 kT to be torn apart This happens on the surface of the sun We can tell this from the line spectra
Our Sun is in the hydrogen fusion cycle of an average, mid-size, main sequence star. I have no idea what state YOUR Sun happens to be in.
The sun eats up more and more hydrogen
The Sun is about 70% hydrogen.
It just stays there waiting to be used-the sun has enough to last many billions of years and luckily for us the rate of burning has stayed fairly constant so far, but eventually it will run out of hydrogen and die.
No. The sun is about 75% hydrogen.
no hydrogen is not affected by the sun because hydrogen can be combined with helium it creates a fuel source but it is not affected by hydrogen by it self so no hydrogen is not affected by the sun
The Sun is composed of about 71% hydrogen by mass. This makes hydrogen the most abundant element in the Sun.
Three-quarters of the Sun's mass is hydrogen. How many hydrogen atoms are in the Sun?
Three-quarters of the Sun's mass is hydrogen. How many hydrogen atoms are in the Sun?