The major subplot in the life stories of stars is the creation of elements. Main sequence stars like the Sun create helium from hydrogen. More massive stars can also make carbon by the triple-alpha process. However, there are many elements in the periodic table heavier than carbon. Are these created in stars or were they present at the birth of the universe? How can we explain the existence and the vastly varying cosmic abundance of different chemical elements? It is the result of the abilities of stars of different masses, and at different stages in their evolution, to create elements up the periodic table.

The question of the origin of the elements was taken up in the 1950s by four young astrophysicists working at the California Institute of Technology. Three of them were from England — the husband-and-wife team of Geoffrey and Margaret Burbidge, and the iconoclastic Fred Hoyle. The fourth was William Fowler, a genial expert in nuclear physics. In a massive paper in 1957, they succeeded in explaining most aspects of the cosmic abundance of elements. They wrote: "the problem of element synthesis is closely allied to the problem of stellar evolution." All the members of the team had stellar careers. The Burbidges each became directors of a major observatory, Hoyle was knighted, and Fowler received the Nobel Prize. Their paper told the story of how stars had created the materials of the everyday world — the calcium in our bones, the nitrogen and oxygen in the air we breathe, the metals in the cars we drive, and the silicon in our computers.

Extreme temperatures are required to fuse heavy elements. Recall that the core of a giant star is contracting. As the core contracts and gets hotter, it can initiate reactions involving even heavier elements. The elements synthesized depend on the mass of the star. Imagine a set of massive red giants with different masses: 4, 6, 8, 10 solar masses, and so on. Those of about 4 or 6 solar masses will have helium-rich cores hot enough to ignite the helium nuclei and fuse them into carbon in the triple-alpha (helium nuclei are also called alpha particles) process just described. Those of around 8 solar masses will have hot enough cores to further ignite the carbon and fuse it into heavier elements such as oxygen, neon, and magnesium.

The reactions in massive stars where helium nuclei are fused to heavier nuclei include:

12C + 4He → 16O + photon

16O + 4He → 20Ne + photon

These reactions require temperatures above 500 million K. Heavy nuclei can also fuse with each other, although in this case the electrical repulsion between protons in the nuclei is stronger, and a temperature above 1 billion K is needed for the reactions to proceed:

Carbon Burning:
12C + 12C → 24Mg + photon

Oxygen Burning:
16O + 16O → 32S + photon

The final stage of burning, which happens only in stars whose cores reach temperatures of a few billion K, is called Silicon burning. Although the overall result of this is to turn silicon and sulfur into iron, it proceeds in a very different way from previous burning stages. The silicon made by oxygen burning is "melted" down by the extreme temperatures in the core to He, neutrons and protons. These particles then rearrange themselves by hundreds of different reactions into elements like 56Fe.

If a star is massive enough, the core-building process leads to a core consisting of shells of increasingly heavier elements, surrounding an inner core of iron. We are used to thinking of iron as a solid metal, but the state of iron at the center of a massive evolved star is quite different. Stellar iron is actually denser than terrestrial iron, but the electrons have been stripped from all the atoms and the nuclei are not held together in a lattice. Fantastic pressure keeps the iron as a high-temperature gas. The shell structure in these stars can be so complex that there can be different fusion reactions happening at the surfaces of different shells all at the same time.

With iron, the fusion process reaches an insurmountable obstacle. Iron has the most stable nuclear configuration of any element. This means that energy is consumed, not produced, as iron nuclei fuse into heavier elements. This can account for the steep fall in abundance of the elements heavier than iron. Thus the iron nuclei in stars do not continue to ignite and fuse as the core contracts and gets hotter. The heart of a star is like an iron tomb that traps matter and releases no energy to counter the continuing collapse.

But what about the elements heavier than iron? If even the most massive stars can only fuse elements up to iron, where do the rest of the elements (like the gold and platinum in jewelry and the uranium that is involved in so many controversies) come from? In addition to the nuclear fusion that stars use as their main source of power, there are side processes that go on, in shell burning in giant stars and in the supernova explosion process, that make these elements heavier than iron. Although they are rare, their existence requires us to explain their production. This gives astronomers yet another test of their stellar models.

Stars are like factories whose main business is the creation of heavy elements from lighter ones. Remember that main sequence stars release less than a percent of the mass of a hydrogen atom as pure energy when they make helium. The same is true of the nuclear reactions at later stages of a star’s life. So the heat and light we see from a star is just a minor by-product of the fusion process, just as the heat and light we see from a factory does not reflect its primary purpose of making large objects from smaller components. Stars are the "factories" of the matter we see around us.  In order to return these newly created elements to interstellar space, stars need to eject them via mass loss - winds, planetary nebulae and supernovae. The dense cores of these objects lock up material that will never be incorporated into the gas that makes a new generation of stars - white dwarfs hold on to their helium, carbon and oxygen, and neutron stars keep the material in iron cores from ever returning to interstellar space.


Author: Chris Impey
Editor/Contributor: Audra Baleisis
Multimedia Aggregator: Erik Brogt
Last modified: Monday, August 30, 2021, 10:46 AM