It forms helium. After it runs out of hydrogen, it'll form carbon.
As I recall, the sun begins to die at the carbon stage because it's too small to fuse heavier elements.
Helium and Alpha particles.
When hydrogen fuses into helium protons break away. During the process, energy is released.
The sun fuses hydrogen in its core. It does not burn it in the sense we are familiar with.
About 0.7% of the mass - this is converted to energy, which powers the Sun.
The sun fuses hydrogen to make helium. It will be several billion years before the sun fuses helium to make heavier elements.
If you are asking "how helium formed the sun?" then for your information, sun and all the stars are formed mostly from Hydrogen. And if you are asking "How helium is formed in the sun?", the answer is that the Hydrogen in the sun fuses in itself(that's where from the sun get's its energy and luminosity) producing variety of elements like helium, carbon oxygen,iron etc.
It forms helium. After it runs out of hydrogen, it'll form carbon. As I recall, the sun begins to die at the carbon stage because it's too small to fuse heavier elements.
When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy. When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy.
Helium. The number two element. Fusion also generates a few neutrinos that are hard to detect.
helium
It forms helium. After it runs out of hydrogen, it'll form carbon. As I recall, the sun begins to die at the carbon stage because it's too small to fuse heavier elements.
Hydrogen atoms fuse into helium.
No. The hydrogen on the Sun does not burn; it fuses to make helium instead.
If source you mean, fuel...then the answer is Hydrogen gas. The sun fuses to hydrogen atoms to create helium.
When hydrogen fuses into helium protons break away. During the process, energy is released.
The sun fuses hydrogen in its core. It does not burn it in the sense we are familiar with.
No. It is the other way around. Hydrogen nuclei fuses to form helium in the center of the sun.
About 0.7% of the mass - this is converted to energy, which powers the Sun.