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Yes. The sun is a giant fusion engine. It's primary work is fusing hydrogen into helium.

Later on in its life, it will fuse helium and heavier elements together until it reaches the end of its life fusing elements to create iron. Iron is the last fusion product created in stars in their "normal" lifetime. Heavier elements are created in nature only in supernovae.

A link is provided below. It's to the Wikipedia article on stellar nucleosynthesis, which is the "cookbook" for the operation of stars.

The sun (or any star) can be considered a giant gravitationally confined fusion reactor. However I sometimes like to think of them as giant ultra-high yield fusion bombs (the fireball is what we see directly, it does not rise forming a mushroom cloud as there is no air in space, and it lasts billions of years instead of minutes due to amount of fuel).

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14y ago

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