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Curious AP question

Nothing. The sun is already "atomized".
 
I mean, for one, it's made of plasma.

I'm 99% sure all the matter in a star is in pure elements, not compounds. And those elements aren't formed into solids. I don't know by what metric you wouldn't consider that atomized.
 
That's its meaning as a colloquial term. If we applied that to feats of atomizing stuff, that'd only be v. frag or pulv. That's clearly not what's meant when we're talking about feats of "atomizing" objects.

And this part I'm less sure on, but I think atoms only contact each other in stars when fusing. Like, that contact is what makes them fuse. The only thing atoms would have contact with outside of that is light.
 
That's its meaning as a colloquial term. If we applied that to feats of atomizing stuff, that'd only be v. frag or pulv. That's clearly not what's meant when we're talking about feats of "atomizing" objects.

And this part I'm less sure on, but I think atoms only contact each other in stars when fusing. Like, that contact is what makes them fuse. The only thing atoms would have contact with outside of that is light.
doesnt atom contact all the time because gravity also vsb wiki terms are diferent that normal terms
 
In a star, I don't think so, because it's a plasma which ends up fusing when the atoms collide.
 
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