English, asked by Anonymous, 6 months ago

why sun burn in space explain please​

Answers

Answered by 18p3490
9

Answer:

Space Sunburn. The sun emits energy over a wide range of wavelengths, including ultraviolet radiation that we can't see or feel... If an astronaut's bare skin was exposed to unfiltered sunlight in space, though, he or she quickly would develop a very bad case of sunburn...

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Answered by ÚɢʟʏÐᴜᴄᴋʟɪɴɢ1
116

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We all know that there is no air in space, and therefore no oxygen to burn. In our everyday experience, the only burning most of us are familiar with is fire combustion. But that is not the only type of reaction; the sun is indeed burning, but it is a nuclear reaction, not a chemical one.

The sun burns hydrogen — a lot of it, several hundred million tons per second. But don’t worry; there’s plenty more where that came from; by most estimates, the sun has enough fuel for about another five billion years.

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