Question:

If any thing goes near the sun it destroy but sun is only the fire ball why it does not destroy?

by  |  earlier

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please tell fast

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7 ANSWERS


  1. I dont understand your question.


  2. It's like asking why does my finger burn when i place it on a flaming stove but the stove remains safe.

    sun is just a nuclear fusion reactor.

    when it completely runs out of fuel, supernovae will occur

  3. the sun is a star. so look up stars its will explain.

  4. The sun isn't a big ball of fire. In real terms the sun is a ball of gas with hyper atoms. When the atoms hit each other the explode, creating fire. so when somthing hits the sun it burns up and dosn't get to get inside of the sun. So when it burns up it might cool down the fire, but it then gets replaced with more fire from the nuclear fusion.

  5. when the sun has consumed all the hydrogen it contains it too will self destruct.

  6. The sun is not a fireball, it is, in effect, a nuclear reactor.  The Sun's outer visible layer is called the photosphere and has a temperature of 6000°C (11000°F).

    Anything that gets close enough to the sun is burned up.  We are 93 million miles from the sun.  Our ozone layer protects us from the worst of the ultraviolet radiation and our magnetic field protects us from solar winds.

    The imaginary surface at which the solar wind is first deflected is called the bow shock. The corresponding region of space sitting behind the bow shock and surrounding the Earth is termed the magnetosphere; it represents a region of space dominated by the Earth's magnetic field in the sense that it largely prevents the solar wind from entering.

  7. The sun is not a fire ball, is closer to a nuclear fusion reactor. The sun will only be destroyed, at least naturally, when it runs out of "fuel", i.e. atoms to fuse together.

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