You're correct, but that doesn't necessarily support your hypothesis that the source of energy is quark-antiquark pair annihilation.
I didn't say it did. The question was whether it was consistent with it, which it is. To be honest, I'm more interested in bendy light than the power source of the Sun. The quark-gluon plasma idea was just that, an idea, and it probably has plenty of flaws in it. I'm not sure if any FE researchers are dealing with the subject of solar energy specifically, but if so they would be better qualified than myself to give a detailed answer on this.
However, given my ignorance of any more plausible alternative, I stand by my quark-gluon plasma idea as a FE Sun power source for the time being.
In other words, no, you don't have any evidence (sorry, but yet another unsupported hypothesis is not evidence) that the radiation observed from the sun is consistent with quark-gluon reactions. Thanks, I'm glad that we could clear that up.
By that reasoning, there's no evidence that observed solar radiation is consistent with nuclear fusion either.