you are an idot god made it oh my gosh what grade are u in??? look in the bible its really easy its in genisis honey!
2006-07-19 03:25:45
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answer #1
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answered by louie_girl_1995 1
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A cold cloud of gas, mostly hydrogen, spanning many light years, the debris from a former generation of stars gone supernova, started to contract by its own gravitational weight. It's not quite that simple, but I do want to keep it simple. Certain areas of that molecular cloud got denser, and like the rich getting richer, the dense areas gravitationally attracted even more matter. These areas kept condensing and getting more and more massive as more material became drawn in towards the core of this dense area. Over the course of many hundreds of millions of years, these dense areas, at their core, became very hot because of all the weight from the gravitational pressure of the gases surrounding the core. As the pressure goes up, so does the temperature of the core. When the temperature reaches 100 million degrees Kelvin, hydrogen atoms start slamming into each other, fusing together and forming helium nuclei, and releasing a huge amount of energy in the process, according to E=mc^2. A star is born. The pressure from the nuclear furnace in the core keeps the star from condensing further. The star reaches equilibrium when the outward pressure from the core is equal to the inward pressure of the weight of the rest of the star bearing down on it. In the case of our sun, it's got about a 10 billion year supply of hydrogen to fuse into helium. It's used up about half. Once all the hydrogen is used up, the nuclear furnace shuts down and other interesting things start to happen to the sun. But that's another story. I don't get the second part of your question, sorry.
2006-07-12 17:04:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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When the Big Pop happened, it spewed forth all kinds of planets, the sun, water, plants and animals. Luckily some of the plants and animals landed on earth and so we are here today. The sun was drawn in its attraction to the earth until it stopped cause it didn't want to get us too hot. The sun actually caught fire just a few seconds before that when a meteor came flying by and struck it like a match.
2006-07-12 13:54:46
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answer #3
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answered by Poncho Rio 4
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God needed a disco ball, and then bam, adam and eve got to business... Grindin' in the garden of eve!
It's a fusion reaction of hydrogen mostly, and several other simple fuels. The hydrogen is pushed together to the point, that 2 hydrogen molecules become one helium molecule, and in the process, much heat is released... With a telescope, and a prism, you can learn what fuels other stars, based on their prismatic breakdowns. Other fuels burn at other rates, sending the photons of light in different wavenlengths... Of course you'll have to note the doppler effect and shift the light closer to the blue spectrum, depending on how far away the star is, to get an accurate reading. Why are you still reading this? I'm rambling
2006-07-12 13:30:17
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answer #4
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answered by rpalm82 2
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The sun is a recycle product of some other gigantic sun exploding and the remnants spread as dust and debris compressed to form our sun,five or more billion years from now our sun will lose it's fuel,expand to form a red giant,and then shrink to become a white dwarf
2006-07-12 14:03:50
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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When the big bang happened, all this gas was everywhere. The gas eventually collected and made stars, which grouped together to make galaxies. This is just a toned down answer to it, but I think the point is made. If you want to get more specific, google it.
2006-07-12 13:27:51
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answer #6
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answered by jgallen829 2
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The sun is just a star, so it's made like all the other stars, how that is I do not know. Search for it on goofle. "How stars are made"
2006-07-12 13:24:38
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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If I knew... I would have got the Nobel Price for Astrophysics...
2006-07-12 13:25:17
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Very carefully! After all this is the largest nuclear bomb in our solar system.
2006-07-12 13:40:17
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answer #9
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answered by Dwayne 2
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bunch of stuff(mainly H2) coalesced to the point where it started nuclear fission from its own mass
2006-07-12 13:30:05
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answer #10
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answered by murat j 2
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