The violent creation of the solar system. There where much heavy elements on this planet before are civilization started its climb. These elements that we have now will deplete further and will not leave much left for the next civilization. It is a act of constant depletion.
hydrogen
Nuclear fusion in stellar cores, such as in stars like our sun, can lead to the formation of larger elements through the fusion of lighter elements. Supernova explosions can also create conditions necessary for the synthesis of heavy elements.
The Sun is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium, with smaller amounts of heavier elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. These elements undergo nuclear fusion in the Sun's core to produce energy and light.
The center of our solar system is the Sun, which is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium. These elements undergo nuclear fusion in the Sun's core, producing light, heat, and energy that sustains life on Earth.
Iron is an element, and is the heaviest element that may be made by fusion in a Star such as our Sun.
BUT
The violent creation of the solar system. There where much heavy elements on this planet before are civilization started its climb. These elements that we have now will deplete further and will not leave much left for the next civilization. It is a act of constant depletion.
hydrogen
The Sun
The most common gas is hydrogen, the next most common is helium, after that the sun contains lower levels of every element on the periodic table (the heaviest elements from iron through uranium were introduced either when the sun originally formed or came in on objects that fell into the sun). All elements (even uranium) are gasses at the temperatures inside the sun!
I think it's our Sun which gets heavier elements from fusion of hydrogen and other light elements.Edit: Our Sun does create helium from hydrogen by fusion, but that's all. The reason it has heavier elements is that these come from the nebula that formed the Sun. The heavier elements are thought to have come from stars that exploded as "supernovas", a long time ago.
Jupiter is the heaviest planet in the solar system and has the highest mass revolving around the Sun. Its immense gravity plays a significant role in influencing the orbits of other celestial bodies in its vicinity.
Spectrographic analysis of the light from the Sun indicates the "absorption lines" that indicate the presence of various elements in the Sun, such as oxygen, carbon, neon, and iron. Most of these trace elements were likely part of the original composition of the dust cloud from which the Sun formed. However, fusion reactions may create small amounts of heavier elements. Many of the elements' atoms are broken down again, but a slow increase may occur deep within the Sun.
This process is known as nuclear fusion. It occurs in stars like the sun when lighter elements such as hydrogen are combined to form heavier elements like helium, releasing a large amount of energy in the process.
Nuclear fusion in stellar cores, such as in stars like our sun, can lead to the formation of larger elements through the fusion of lighter elements. Supernova explosions can also create conditions necessary for the synthesis of heavy elements.
Elements used to create: Hydrogen, Helium, Time. Things the Sun contains: Neutrinos, Heat, Atoms, Photons, Hydrogen, Helium.