Helium is formed by the fusion of hydrogen at temperatures above 3.106 kelvin.
When hydrogen and helium are mixed, they will not react chemically because they are both inert gases. Instead, they will form a gaseous mixture with the properties of both gases, maintaining their individual characteristics.
Helium is heavier than hydrogen. Hydrogen is the lightest and simplest element in the periodic table, while helium is the second lightest element.
Hydrogen is about 7 lighter than helium.
Hydrogen and helium are the two most abundant elements in the universe.
Hydrogen and Helium. Also comprised of a core of much heavier elements, all the elements in the universe heavier than hydrogen probably came from supernovae.
Nuclear fusion, in which hydrogen-1 is fused into helium-4.
Helium is completely inert, it is the most inert of all elements, and so it will not react in any way with hydrogen (or with any other element). So, if you mix hydrogen and helium, nothing happens. You have a mixture of hydrogen and helium. It's a lot lighter than air, you can make balloons that will float. Of course, you can do that with pure hydrogen or with pure helium, as well.
It derives its energy from nuclear fusion reactions that transform, in its nucleus, hydrogen into helium.
The symbol for hydrogen is H, and the symbol for helium is He.
Hydrogen and helium
Yes you can make hydrogen from water through electrolysis. And also from helium (this happens in the sun)
helium and hydrogen gases
Hydrogen is H2. Helium is He.
Hydrogen and helium are formed in Sun.
No. Helium and Hydrogen are two different elements.
When hydrogen and helium are mixed, they will not react chemically because they are both inert gases. Instead, they will form a gaseous mixture with the properties of both gases, maintaining their individual characteristics.
No, helium is almost 4 times as heavy as hydrogen.