It's a noble gas - you either find it or you don't.
(Until someone builds a functioning fusion reactor.)
Some helium was produced during the Big Bang; the remainder was produced in stars, through nuclear fusion.
It is produced from hydrogen, by nuclear fusion.
The big bang produced the helium no present in the sun's core. The universe cooled down enough after the big bang to form the formation of helium and hydrogen.
Above -268.93 °C, helium is gas. Below -268.93 °C, helium is liquid. Helium cannot exist as solid.
In deuterium-tritium fusion, the result is helium-4. In helium fusion, carbon is produced.
Some helium was produced during the Big Bang; the remainder was produced in stars, through nuclear fusion.
Helium is produced.
If you refer to the fusion in stars, 4 atoms of hydrogen-1 combine to form one atom of helium-4.
yes
It is produced from hydrogen, by nuclear fusion.
Helium is produced by fusion in the interior of the Sun.
helium
Helium
Helium is produced
No, energy is produced by the opposite reaction, hydrogen to helium
Helium cannot turn into anything, it is a stable element.
helium atoms