The Iron Star was created in 1930.
nuclear fusion in a massive star that ended its life in a supernova explosion.
The Iron Star has 356 pages.
Iron is created in the core of massive stars during the process of nuclear fusion. When a star exhausts its nuclear fuel, it undergoes a supernova explosion that releases energy and elements, including iron, into space. This process disperses iron and other elements throughout the universe, eventually leading to the formation of new stars and planets.
The star that produces all elements from helium through iron is typically a massive star during its life cycle. In the core of these stars, nuclear fusion processes combine lighter elements into heavier ones, a process known as nucleosynthesis. This occurs during different stages of a star's life, particularly in the late stages before the star explodes in a supernova, where elements up to iron are formed. Heavier elements beyond iron are created in the supernova explosion itself.
it wouldn't be possible. once iron has begun forming inside a large star, it only has seconds of "life" left. the iron wants to attract energy and sucks what life the star has left out of it and collapses the core, imploding it and creating a supernova. after this, it will either be a super-dense neutron star or the core could have collapsed completely and make a black hole. in the supernova, elements heavier than iron are created. such as gold, silver, and platinum. which is why they are so rare and valuable.
Iron fusion cannot support a star because iron is the most stable element and cannot release energy through fusion reactions. This causes the star to collapse, leading to a supernova explosion.
All of them. A star begins to die when it creates Iron. Then it creates all the elements heavier than Iron. It has already created the elements lighter. Thus when the star explodes it spreads the elements it has created witch is all of them.
Iron molecules in the body are created through nuclear fusion in the cores of massive stars or during supernova explosions. These processes release iron-rich debris into space, which eventually becomes incorporated into the Earth's minerals and ultimately into living organisms.
Technically, yes. All of the iron present in the Earth, including that contained within red blood cells was created inside stars. When a type of star known as a Red Giant has turned all of its helium into carbon and oxygen atoms, these atoms then begin to turn into iron. When most of the star's atoms become iron, the star goes supernova - exploding and throwing out oxygen, carbon, and iron atoms far into space. From here, the force of gravity eventually compresses those clouds of atoms into asteroids and planets.
iron
Elements more massive than iron are created through processes such as supernova explosions and neutron star mergers, where extreme conditions allow for the fusion of lighter elements into heavier ones.
Big Iron was created in 1959.