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The Sun is, at present, about 90.1% hydrogen and 9.9% helium and a small mixture of heavy elements(iron, calcium,sodium).This changes slowly over time as the Sun converts hydrogen to helium in its core.

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12y ago
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12y ago

The sun is mainly hydrogen gas (91.2% )which burns to form helium (8.7%). Traces of other heavier elements are formed by fusion reactions such as oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, magnesium, neon, iron and sulfur (all of these are much less than 1% of the total mass of the Sun.

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11y ago

Hydrogen-1 is converted into helium-4, at a high temperature and pressure, in a process known as "nuclear fusion". This produces a lot of energy. For details about the main reaction occurring in the Sun, take a look at the Wikipedia article on the "proton-proton reaction".

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15y ago

Not solely. The surface of the Sun consists of hydrogen (74%), helium (24%), and trace quantities of other elements, including iron, nickel, oxygen, silicon, sulphur, magnesium, carbon, neon, calcium, and chromium. The hydrogen turns - by nuclear fusion - to helium and when the hyrdrogen fusion process ends the helium will in turn fuse into other elements.

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9y ago

Technically, it is made up of plasma - i.e., ionized gas. This is considered another state of matter.

The most common element in the Universe - at its current stage! - is hydrogen, followed by helium. At some point, such gases (and a smaller amount of heavier elements) come together to form a star (such as the Sun). Due to the extreme heat generated when a star is formed, which is later increased by the nuclear fusion in the star's core, ANY material within the star can only be in the form of a gas - or rather, a plasma.

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11y ago

Closer to 30% actually, but the helium is the "ash" left over from the nuclear fusion "fire" that powers the Sun.

We believe that our Sun was mostly hydrogen when the solar system formed, and when the gravity of all that hydrogen pulled it all together, it compressed and heated the hydrogen gas. At about 15 million degrees, nuclear fusion started to generate energy, keeping the Sun shining. Four atoms of hydrogen come together to form one atom of helium, and leaves a little energy left over.

5 billion years or so from now, the helium will be over 50% of the Sun's mass, and it will start to collapse again. This increases the pressure and the temperature, and at about 30 million degrees, the helium itself will begin to fuse, causing the Sun to expand into a red giant. After another billion years, the Sun will begin to collapse into a white dwarf, and begin to die out.

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11y ago

The Sun is about 70% hydrogen, 28% helium, and about 2% heavier elements. As time goes on, the Sun's nuclear reaction is fusing hydrogen into helium, so that the proportion of hydrogen is slowly falling and the percentage of helium is slowly increasing.

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13y ago

Yes, but it doesn't actually "burn" it, it goes through nuclear fusion, fusing into helium.

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12y ago

the sun is primarly made of plasma and constent fusion.

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9y ago

The sun is composed of about 73% Hydrogen, 25% Helium, and 2% Oxygen... This means that the sun is mainly composed of Hydrogen

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Q: The sun is mainly composed of helium and what other element?
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What does every other star in the milkey way galaxy have in common with the sun?

They are composed of mainly hydrogen and helium.


What kind of stars are mainly composed of hydrogen?

All stars are mainly composed of hydrogen. Stars also contain small amounts of helium and trace amounts of other elements such as nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon.


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What element makes up most of the detectable mass in the universe?

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Is the element He a compound?

NO!!!! He (Helium) is monatomic gas, that is it exists as single atoms, and does NOT combine with any other substance to form a compound. 'He' is the most inert element of all. It alsao has the lowest condensing point 4K4 (-269 oC) and freezing point at 2K (-271oC).


Does helium react with common compounds?

No. helium does not react with any other element


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Helium is itself a chemical element and therefore is not found in any other chemical element.


What is the chmical properties of helium?

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Explain why helium does not react with other element to form a compounds?

why helium does not react with other elements to form compounds