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About 20 000 years believe it or not. The material near the Sun's core is so dense (98 grams per cubic centimetre) that the photons that carry the fusion energy outwards keep bumping into nuclei and work their way outwards in a long slow random walk. They start off as high energy gamma rays, but with each collision they lose a little energy. By the time they emerge from the photosphere, they're UV, visible or heat radiation.

2006-09-15 18:38:23 · answer #1 · answered by zee_prime 6 · 1 0

i think of you will locate that warmth in itself isn't some thing which would be measured. purely it fairly is result on some thing else. simply by fact the sunlight is often greater or less the comparable temperature there isn't any way you may ever be waiting to inform how long it took for the waste made from warmth, brought about via the reaction interior the middle, to attain the exterior layer. it fairly is merely an impossible calculation.

2016-12-15 08:46:23 · answer #2 · answered by ehiginator 3 · 0 0

Nobody knows.

I really wonder why everyone is asking this question nowadays. Its so idiotic everyone still ask this question.

"No one knows! -Probably several million years."
"Probably more than a million years."
"Current estimates range from 17,000 years to 50 million years."
"The energy generated in the Sun's core takes about 30,000 years to reach the photosphere's surface, where it is mostly emitted as light and infrared (heat) radiation."

2006-09-15 19:03:16 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It takes approximatley 1,000,000 years the reason being that the core of the sun is so dense and energetic that the subatomic particles that make up light are obstructed on their way out of the core

2006-09-15 18:31:58 · answer #4 · answered by LenV 2 · 0 0

i've heard 20,000 years, haven't checked it out myself though

2006-09-15 19:09:24 · answer #5 · answered by larry n 4 · 0 0

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