NUCLEOSYNTHESIS

or nucleogenesis, in astronomy, production of all the chemical elements from the simplest element, hydrogen, by thermonuclear reactions within stars, supernovas, and in the big bang at the beginning of the universe (see nucleus; nuclear energy). A star obtains its energy by fusing together light nuclei to form heavier nuclei; in this process, mass (m) is converted into energy (E) in accordance with Einstein's formula, E=mc2, in which c is the speed of light. The reactions are initiated by the high temperatures (about 14 million degrees Celsius) at the center of the star. In the course of producing nuclear energy, the star synthesizes all the elements of the periodic table from its initial composition of mostly hydrogen and a small amount of helium.

Transformation of Hydrogen to Helium

The first step is the fusion of four hydrogen nuclei to make one helium nucleus. This "hydrogen-burning" phase supplies energy to stars on the main sequence of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. There are two chains of reactions by which the conversion of hydrogen to helium is effected: the proton-proton cycle and the carbon-nitrogen-oxygen cycle (sometimes referred to simply as the carbon cycle). They were both first studied and proposed as sources of stellar energy by H. Bethe and independently by C. von Weiszäcker. The proton-proton cycle operates in less massive and luminous stars like the sun, while the carbon-nitrogen-oxygen cycle (which speeds up dramatically at higher temperatures) dominates in more massive and luminous stars.

The Proton-Proton Cycle

In the proton-proton cycle, two hydrogen nuclei (protons) are fused and one of these protons is converted to a neutron by beta decay (see radioactivity) to make a deuterium nucleus (one proton and one neutron). Then a third proton is added to deuterium to form the light isotope of helium, helium-3. When two helium-3 nuclei collide, they form a nucleus of ordinary helium, helium-4 (two protons and two neutrons), and release two protons. In each of these steps considerable energy is also released.

The Carbon-Nitrogen-Oxygen Cycle

The carbon-nitrogen-oxygen cycle requires minute traces of carbon as a catalyst. Four protons are added, one by one, to a carbon nucleus to form a succession of excited (unstable) nuclei of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. The intermediate nuclei shed their excess electric charge via beta decay and the final oxygen nucleus spontaneously splits into the original carbon nucleus and a helium-4 nucleus, releasing energy. The net effect is again the combination of four hydrogen nuclei to form one helium-4 nucleus; the carbon is free to begin the cycle over again.

Creation of the Heavier Elements

After the bulk of a star's hydrogen has been converted to helium by either the proton-proton or carbon-nitrogen-oxygen process, the stellar core contracts (while the outer layers expand) until sufficiently high temperatures are reached to initiate "helium-burning" by the triple-alpha process; in this process, three helium nuclei (alpha particles) are fused to make a carbon nucleus. By successive additions of helium nuclei, the heavier elements through iron-56 are built up. The elements whose atomic weights are not multiples of four are created by side reactions that involve neutrons. Because iron-56 is the most stable of the elements, it is very difficult to add an extra helium nucleus to it. However, iron-56 will readily capture a neutron to form the less stable isotope, iron-57. From iron-57, the elements through bismuth-209 can be synthesized. The elements more massive than bismuth-209 are radioactive; that is, they spontaneously break apart. However, during a supernova, an extremely intense flux of neutrons is generated and nuclear reactions proceed so rapidly that the radioactive elements do not have enough time to decay, resulting in the rapid creation of the radioactive elements up to and beyond uranium.

Bibliography

See D. L. Clayton, Principles of Stellar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis (1968, repr. 1983).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Nucleosynthesis
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books on: Nucleosynthesis  - 71 results

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...They also recognized that after nucleosynthesis ceased, these photons would continue...physics. At the beginning of the nucleosynthesis epoch, no nuclei existed. Instead...about 10.5 minutes. During the nucleosynthesis epoch, two processes involving neutrons...
...would be too low to permit significant nucleosynthesis, unless .0 ? 1. In the case when...can have Xn = 0.5 at the moment of nucleosynthesis, so that all the neutrons end up...another complication in the theory of nucleosynthesis: the total density of neutrinos and...
...matter which do not play any role in nucleosynthesis and which are therefore ignored in...discussion . In the present matter era, nucleosynthesis occurs predominantly in stellar interiors...degrees characteristic of the onset of nucleosynthesis, the density of the Universe is too...
...of ordinary matter, the epoch of nucleosynthesis. 1 The earliest millionths of a second...microwave background and the theory of nucleosynthesis have lifted the big bang above the...Hoyle developed the foundations of nucleosynthesis, one of the most important consequences...
...relationships during primordial nucleosynthesis). What actually is plotted...simple Big Bang picture of nucleosynthesis as depending on one free parameter...the density of matter during nucleosynthesis. The density of radiation...
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journal articles on: Nucleosynthesis  - 3 results

 
 
...Si (28%) and O (47%), combine to form quartz (Table 1). Both elements are born in the final stages of nucleosynthesis of red giant stars and scattered to the universe when such stars explode. Differentiation of chemicals during planet...
...undergone some processing to create the elements that are found in the Solar System. This processing took place by nucleosynthesis in stars. On their death, the stellar matter was released to the interstellar medium by mass loss events such...
...have students apply their knowledge of higher-level concepts learned in class (e.g., r- and s-process nucleosynthesis, remnant magnetism, interaction between seismic waves and the solid Earth) to a relatively recent research article...


 

magazine articles on: Nucleosynthesis  - 4 results

 
 
...and their isotopes that would have been formed in this nucleosynthesis era were calculated and later verified by observations...universe that we see today. Its proponents claimed that nucleosynthesis took place in stars rather than in the early hot, dense...
...the relative abundances of the elements change with time, because of what goes on inside the stars themselves. Nucleosynthesis-including the energy-producing fusion reactions that make stars shine-turns lighter elements into heavier...
...it" in a depersonalized way: not as the God "Helios" but as the generator of elemental helium through stellar nucleosynthesis. Darwin and God Darwin didnt kill God. To the contrary, he and Alfred Russel Wallace offered the first glimpse...
...about a billion Kelvin, finally allowing for light nuclei of deuterium, helium, and lithium to be created by nucleosynthesis. This is the beginning of the era of nuclei. 100,000 years later, the temperature reached the 4,000K mark...


 

newspaper articles on: Nucleosynthesis  - 2 results

 
 
...questions of "why are we here and where did we come from?" are still of inestimable importance. He "discovered" nucleosynthesis in stars, for example. Helped explain "Black Holes". However the book I found myself looking at was called...
...just nine? 25 Which four chemical elements are believed to have been the only four formed in the first round of nucleosynthesis, in the first few minutes after the Big Bang? 26 Which European capital city is served by an airport just outside...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Nucleosynthesis  - 15 results

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NUCLEOSYNTHESIS or nucleogenesis, in astronomy, production of all the chemical...Bibliography See D. L. Clayton, Principles of Stellar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis (1968, repr. 1983...
CARBON-NITROGEN-OXYGEN CYCLE see nucleosynthesis . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...and in 1967 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the origin of solar and stellar energy (see nucleosynthesis ). He wrote The Road from Los Alamos (1991) and, with R. W. Jackiw, Intermediate Quantum Mechanics (3d ed...
...exploded population II stars, population I stars have a considerable content of heavy elements that were created by nucleosynthesis in the interiors of the earlier stars. Population I and population II stars are both found in the spiral galaxies...
...explosion, when its capability for nuclear reactions is exhausted. The heavy atoms created in supernovas (see nucleosynthesis ) are spewed out to become part of the interstellar matter from which new stars are continuously formed. Location...
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