The Hindu (Delhi)

Nucleosynt­hesis: the element factory

- Karthik Vinod

Stellar nucleosynt­hesis is the process by which stars forge elements inside their cores.

The only element not formed in this way is hydrogen, the most abundant and lightest element in the universe: it was formed in the initial aftermath of the Big Bang.

The cores of stars have crushing pressures and temperatur­e. For example, the sun’s core temperatur­e is about 15 million degrees C. In these harsh conditions, the nuclei of atoms undergo nuclear fusion.

The hydrogen nucleus is just one proton. Inside the core, these nuclei come together to form helium nuclei (two protons and two neutrons). This is the p-p (short for proton-proton) process.

In more massive stars, however, stellar nucleosynt­hesis treads a dierent path — one dictated by the availabili­ty of energy. More massive stars have a higher core temperatur­e. There, in the so-called carbon-nitrogen-oxygen (CNO) cycle, the nuclei of these elements come together in dierent ways to form elements from helium onwards.

When a star runs out of nuclei to fuse, its core contracts. This in

The cores of stars have crushing pressures and temperatur­e. Representa­tive image. return increases its temperatur­e, triggering nuclear fusion yet again. This process goes back and forth until the star starts to produce iron in its core. Iron is the lightest element for which fusion consumes more energy than it releases. Elements heavier than iron can only be synthesise­d outside a star when it goes supernova.

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Mt. Ibu, on the remote Indonesian island of Halmahera, erupts spectacula­rly, spewing a grey ash cloud 4 km into the sky as streaks of lightning flash around its crater. Authoritie­s have evacuated people from seven nearby villages. Ibu’s eruption follows a series of such outbursts from dierent volcanoes in Indonesia, which sits on the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’ and has 127 active volcanoes.
◣ Mt. Ibu, on the remote Indonesian island of Halmahera, erupts spectacula­rly, spewing a grey ash cloud 4 km into the sky as streaks of lightning flash around its crater. Authoritie­s have evacuated people from seven nearby villages. Ibu’s eruption follows a series of such outbursts from dierent volcanoes in Indonesia, which sits on the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’ and has 127 active volcanoes.
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