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  1. www.nasa.gov › image-article › anatomy-of-sunAnatomy of the Sun - NASA

    23. Jan. 2013 · Anatomy of the Sun – from Mysteries of the Sun. Image of the Sun with cut-away portion showing the solar interior with text descriptions of the regions as follows (from inner-most to outer-most): The Sun’s Core – Energy is generated via thermonuclear reactions creating extreme temperatures deep within the Sun’s core. The Radiative Zone ...

  2. 16. Mai 2024 · Mena Suvari (“RZR,” “American Beauty”) and Antoine Olivier Pilon (“French Girl”) have been cast as the leads in psychological drama “Anatomy of the Sun.” The film, from writer and director Steven Richter, also features Iman Karram in a supporting role. “Anatomy of the Sun” follows Alex (Pilon), a music producer who is haunted by visions …

  3. 22. Jan. 2020 · Anatomy of the Sun. This is where the Sun generates its energy. The temperature in the core is around 15 million degrees Celsius. This, combined with the huge pressure and density of the plasma force hydrogen nuclei to fuse together, creating helium and releasing vast quantities of energy in the process.

  4. Scientists call this balance “hydrostatic equilibrium”. There are two main forces acting in a star: Gravitational contraction: it is due to the higher layers, this force pushes mass to the center. Radiation pressure: it is produced by the inner layers, and it forces material upwards. The different layers of the Sun.

  5. The Sun. The Sun is our nearest star. Nuclear reactions deep within create energy in the form of the light and heat that we need to survive. To generate this energy, the Sun consumes four million tonnes of hydrogen fuel every second, and has done so since it was born, around 4.6 billion years ago. But the Sun is so large that it is expected to ...

  6. Anatomy of the Sun: Directed by Steven Richter. With Mena Suvari, Antoine Olivier Pilon, Iman Karram. Years after the mysterious death of his sister, Alex wakes up in his childhood home not knowing how he got there.

  7. In Depth. The Sun is a 4.5 billion-year-old yellow dwarf star – a hot glowing ball of hydrogen and helium – at the center of our solar system. It’s about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) from Earth and it’s our solar system’s only star. Without the Sun’s energy, life as we know it could not exist on our home planet.