When stars inter into the red giant stage from the main-sequence stage, supergiant stars can form. The zone of hydrogen burning expands the star outward leaving an inert helium core. This outward movement causes hydrogen fusion in the outer shell of the star making the star thousands of times larger.
They don't - new born stars and planets are formed together.
Close, but not exactly. Hydrogen is not formed by nuclear reactions in stars, hydrogen was formed not long after the Big Bang, when the expanding universe had cooled sufficiently that an electron and a proton could combine to form a hydrogen atom. Helium and all the other elements that are heavier than hydrogen, were formed by the process of nuclear fusion, in stars.
Because they formed from stars, which are in space.
These stars are formed preponderant by neutrons.
In cool stars, elements such as hydrogen and helium are primarily produced through nuclear fusion in their cores. Elements heavier than helium (e.g., carbon, oxygen, and iron) are formed through nucleosynthesis processes during the later stages of a star's lifecycle, such as in red giant stars or during supernova events.
All stars are formed from protostars.
Stars. That is how stars are formed. They form from nebulae.
Stars are formed in a nebula.
They're not formed here. They were formed in stars - mainly as they exploded.
Up today mendelevium was not identified in stars.
stars
explosions
they formed animations
No, all-stars are not formed by nebulas. All-stars are formed from clouds of gas and dust called molecular clouds, which collapse under their own gravity to form a star. Nebulas are massive clouds of dust and gas in space, where stars are born.
The stars throughout the disk.
No. The hydrogen in the universe was formed during the Big Bang. Stars consume hydrogen, fusing it into helium.
Gasses and stuff like that.