Sentences with phrase «nuclear furnaces»

Most of the chemical elements, composing everything from planets to paramecia, are forged by the nuclear furnaces in stars like the Sun.
All heavier elements like carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen were created much later in the hot nuclear furnaces of stars.
The carbon atoms that are essential to life on Earth were forged in the nuclear furnaces of stars that lived and died in an earlier epoch of the Universe, and which seeded the clouds out of which our own Sun and the Solar System were formed.
Heavier elements — including nitrogen, oxygen, iron, carbon and more — were forged in the nuclear furnaces at the cores of those first stars, then spewed into interstellar space when the stars exploded.
More important, high - mass clusters produce high - mass stars — brightly burning nuclear furnaces 10 to 100 times the mass of our sun.
The universe is 13.7 billion years old, and its first 500 million years or so were dark because the first stars had not yet ignited their nuclear furnaces.
Elements heavier than hydrogen and helium are forged in the nuclear furnaces of stars or during supernova explosions.
Without them, we would have no understanding of the physics that governs the tides, waves breaking on the beach, the ever - changing weather, the movements of the planets, the nuclear furnaces of the stars, the spirals of galaxies — the vastness of the universe and our place within it.
These elements are forged in the stars» fiery nuclear furnaces.
Neutrinos are elementary particles produced in the nuclear furnaces inside stars and in supernova explosions.
From 5 to 8 billion years, the sun's nuclear furnace will undergo a dramatic shift, causing it to expand to enormous size and engulf Mercury, Venus, and possibly Earth.
If only we had a giant source of energy... say a nuclear furnace of some sort... to bombard the earth with photons that could supply the energy for life processes.
Creating so much oxygen takes a fiercer nuclear furnace than is needed for a carbon - rich mixture, so the stars that became these white dwarfs must have been hot and massive.
The behavior of high - speed particles — whether the result of physicists» colliders or the sun's nuclear furnace — only makes sense with special relativity.
On the one hand we have the hot Sun, a nuclear furnace that is 1047 times as massive as Jupiter.
It requires sunfulls of dust and strong gravitational crunches to ignite the nuclear furnace that powers them.
The presence of a protoplanetary disk, on the other hand, could hinder the star's rotation, thereby causing lithium and other lighter elements to sink deep inside the star's nuclear furnace, where they are consumed.
The pressure at the center becomes so great that hydrogen atoms begin to fuse and produce helium, starting up the nuclear furnace inside the young star.
It's called the Rukus Solar, and it gets its power from the 620 million metric tons of hydrogen fused each second by the Sun's nuclear furnace.

Not exact matches

Selected Group Exhibitions 2017 Ted Stamm / Gerrit Rietveld, OV Project, Brussels, Belgium 2017 Painting on the Edge: A Historical Survey, Stephen Friedman Gallery, London 2012 Times Square Show Revisited, Hunter College Art Galleries, New York, NY 2010 Black & White, Galleri Weinberger, Copenghagen, Denmark 1987 Recent Acquisitions, Guggenheim Museum, Brooklyn, NY 1987 Recent Acquisitions, Brooklyn Museum, New York, NY 1985 Art Heritage at Hofstra, Emily Lowe Gallery, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 1985 Constructures: New Perimetries in Abstract Painting, Nohra Haime Gallery, New York, NY 1984 Fourth Annual Anniversary Show, John Davis Gallery, Akron, OH 1984 Fifteen Abstract New York Painters, Susan Montezinos Gallery, Philadeiphia, PA 1984 Small Works, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA 1984 Mail Art, Franklin Furnace, New York, NY 1984 Artists Call, Judson Memorial Church, New York, NY 1984 Process Black, LIU South Hampton, New York, NY 1984 A Decade of Art, Artists Space 105 Hudson, New York, NY 1984 Offset: A Survey of Artists Books, New England Foundation for the Arts, Wakefield, RI 1983 David Reed, Sean Scully, Ted Stamm; Zenith Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA 1983 Donald Alberti, Russell Maltz, Olivier Mosset, Ted Stamm; 1708 East Main Street, Richmond, VA 1983 Abstraction Two Views: Davis and Stamm, The Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH 1983 Second Anniversary Exhibition, Harm Bouckaert Gallery, New York, NY 1983 Hundreds of Drawings, Artists Space, New York, NY 1983 A More Store, Jack Tilton Gallery, New York, NY 1983 Donald Alberti, Russell Maltz, Olivier Mosset, Ted Stamm; Condeso / Lawler Gallery, New York, NY 1983 Artists for Nuclear Disarmament, Colburn Gallery, Burlington, VT 1982 A Look Back: A Look Forward, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT 1982 Pair Group, Art Galaxy, New York, NY; travelled to Jersey City Art Museum, Jersey City, NJ 1982 Destroyed Prints, Pratt Manhattan Center, New York, NY 1982 Annual Holiday Invitational, A.I.A. Gallery, New York, NY 1982 Group Exhibition, Roy Boyd Gallery Chicago, Merwin Gallery, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL 1982 Pair Group II, Jersey City Museum, Jersey City, NJ 1982 Black and White, Freeport Mc Mo Ran, New York, NY 1982 Faculty Exhibition, Hillwood Commons Gallery, C.W. Post, Greenvale, NY 1981 Drawings, Roy Boyd Gallery, Chicago, IL 1981 Abstract Painting: New York, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 1981 Arabia Felix, Art Galaxy, New York, NY 1981 Words and Images: Contemporary Artist's Books, Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art, Loreto, PA 1981 Love: Hate: Fear and Suicide, University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium 1981 New Directions, Commodities Corp..
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