Stars contain hydrogen, helium and a little iron.
H Hydrogen which is the lightest element that is highly flammable element and He Helium the second lightest element with no fire risk. This is why helium is used in making balloons than hydrogen which is much lighter than helium.
There is every known element floating around in outer space, since that is where most of the elements on Earth originally came from. When a star that is 25 times the size of our own sun goes supernova, it explodes and sends out most of it's mass (24 solar masses) into outer space.
Basically all of them. However, most stars contain large amounts of hydrogen (since that's the most common element in the Universe), as well as helium, as well as smaller amounts of other elements.
The most common star in our solar system is the Sun, with a total count of one (1). There are no other stars inside the solar system.
Red Dwarf Stars
Hydrogen
hydrogen
Hydrogen.
The most common element in a young star is hydrogen. During the star formation process, vast amounts of hydrogen gas collapse under gravity to form a new star. This hydrogen fuel is what powers nuclear fusion reactions in the star's core, creating energy and sustaining the star's brightness.
A star can be made out of any compound found on Earth, but the most common is Hydrogen or Helium.
H Hydrogen which is the lightest element that is highly flammable element and He Helium the second lightest element with no fire risk. This is why helium is used in making balloons than hydrogen which is much lighter than helium.
I suppose you mean "the most common chemical element". That would be hydrogen. Older stars, however, may have burned up most of their hydrogen and consist mainly of helium, or even heavier elements - the so-called "metals".
The most common type of star is the red dwarf.
The red dwarves.
The "star" topology is the most common.
There is every known element floating around in outer space, since that is where most of the elements on Earth originally came from. When a star that is 25 times the size of our own sun goes supernova, it explodes and sends out most of it's mass (24 solar masses) into outer space.
The answer is ..... aluminum