If you refer to the fusion in stars, 4 atoms of hydrogen-1 combine to form one atom of helium-4.
No, in fact sunlight is produced by nuclear fusion, not directly but from the heat produced which makes the outer layer of the sun incandescent
Nuclear fusion is not renewable. It requires hydrogen nuclei as an energy source, and once these have been used in fusion they are not naturally replenished. In fact, fusion power has a very high energy change, rendering it near impossible to reverse the process. A star, for example, is powered by nuclear fusion, and will eventually die out due to a lack of hydrogen.
The sun's energy is produced by nuclear fusion (not fission) at the core of the sun.
fusion of hydrogen it's nuclear fusion, when gravity tries to crush a star it has to produce outward pressure and it does that by converting hydrogen into helium and other heavy elements. But it has to be really hot like in the millions for nuclear fusion to work.
No Strontium is produced by nuclear fission not fusion.
Nuclear fusion is a process where two atomic nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus, releasing a large amount of energy. It is the same process that powers the sun and other stars. Scientists are researching ways to harness nuclear fusion to generate clean and abundant energy on Earth.
Helium is produced by fusion in the interior of the Sun.
Helium is produced.
Fusion.
The energy of the Sun is produced by nuclear fusion - the fusion of hydrogen into helium.
In deuterium-tritium fusion, the result is helium-4. In helium fusion, carbon is produced.
It is produced from hydrogen, by nuclear fusion.
thermonuclear fusion and hydrogen becoming helium... :)
In the most common stellar fusion, helium gas is formed from the fusion of hydrogen nuclei.
osteoclasts
fusion of hydrogen