Beryllium was not created during the stellar nucleosynthesis.
Nucleosynthesis in the early stages of the universe. This created light elements up to Beryllium. The others came from nuclear fission when stars formed, and were distributed by supernova explosions at the end of some of the stars' life. Takes about a billion of years by order of magnitude.
One example of a nuclear reaction involving beryllium is the reaction of beryllium-9 with an alpha particle (helium-4 nucleus) to produce carbon-12 and a neutron. This reaction is important in stellar nucleosynthesis and occurs in high-energy environments such as inside stars.
Beryllium. And it's an element, not a chemical.
Yes. It is the compound of the elements Beryllium and fluorine.
Beryllium, in the sense, is not formed. It is a pure element and cannot be created by normal means. Beryllium can be made in the lab, but there is really no need to because it can be found naturally.
The Stars We Are was created in 1988-09.
Helium and metals (which basically means any element heavier than helium) are formed in the star's core.
It is not specifically those elements which "produce stars". Whatever elements happen to be around clump together, through gravity, and form the star.
Seeing Stars was created in 1993.
For the Stars was created on 2001-04-10.
Stars on Sunday was created in 2008.
Beyond the Stars was created in 1989.