helium is made
Fusion experiments and designs for fusion reactors generally focus on hydrogen, in the forms of deuterium (hydrogen-2) and/or tritium (hydrogen-3). It should be born in mind that there is not much preventing any atom of any natural element undergoing fusion with something else. In fact, virtually all of what is around us is either hydrogen or something made by fusion, and this includes all the heavy elements like lead uranium.
You think probable to hydrogen.
No fusion, no element
Hydrogen is turned into helium in stars.
Hydrogen (into Helium).
Typically, hydrogen-1 is converted into helium-4.
Helium is produced by fusion in the interior of the Sun.
Mainly; hydrogen, deuterium, and tritium
Our sun mostly transforms hydrogen nuclei into helium by fusion, but it also fuses helium with helium, lithium with hydrogen, and beryllium with hydrogen, to make elements as heavy as boron.
The first element that is converted in a star's core is hydrogen. Through nuclear fusion, hydrogen atoms fuse together to form helium, releasing energy in the process. This fusion process is what powers a star and allows it to shine.
When a hydrogen bomb explodes, the primary element formed is helium. This occurs through the process of nuclear fusion, where hydrogen isotopes combine to form helium atoms, releasing a large amount of energy in the process.
fusion reactions in stars