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mass abundances of about 75% of hydrogen-1, about 25% helium-4, about 0.01% of deuterium and helium-3, trace amounts (on the order of 10−10) of lithium, and negligible heavier elements.
Some of the elements in the sun are detectable from it's spectrum ...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraunhofer_lines#NamingThey include elements which are too heavy to have been made in our Sun.
It is thought that the Big Bang would have produced a mix of elements something like:Quote from: Wikipedia mass abundances of about 75% of hydrogen-1, about 25% helium-4, about 0.01% of deuterium and helium-3, trace amounts (on the order of 10−10) of lithium, and negligible heavier elements. Hydrogen and Helium do not radiate energy well, which would have resisted gravitational collapse into stars.It is thought that the first stars (a hypothesized group dubbed "Population III") would have been very massive, as only a very intense gravitational self-attraction could overcome the internal pressure of hot hydrogen & helium. Such stars would have burnt all their fuel very rapidly and exploded as a supernova, seeding the cosmos with heavier elements.Later stars (Population II) and today's Population I stars tend to be much smaller, with much higher proportions of heavier elements.See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_population#Population_III_stars
The thing I don't understand is how can humans make heavier elements than the sun, using only mild earth conditions, yet also assume the sun, with far more extreme conditions can't do squat? Is it because humans can use fission and fusion, while we only allow the sun to use fusion, so we can cheat and play god?
Quote from: evan_au on 21/12/2017 10:46:30It is thought that the Big Bang would have produced a mix of elements something like:Quote from: Wikipedia mass abundances of about 75% of hydrogen-1, about 25% helium-4, about 0.01% of deuterium and helium-3, trace amounts (on the order of 10−10) of lithium, and negligible heavier elements. Hydrogen and Helium do not radiate energy well, which would have resisted gravitational collapse into stars.It is thought that the first stars (a hypothesized group dubbed "Population III") would have been very massive, as only a very intense gravitational self-attraction could overcome the internal pressure of hot hydrogen & helium. Such stars would have burnt all their fuel very rapidly and exploded as a supernova, seeding the cosmos with heavier elements.Later stars (Population II) and today's Population I stars tend to be much smaller, with much higher proportions of heavier elements.See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_population#Population_III_starsSo hydrogen and helium alone are very bad for star formation. I am going to be thinking more about this.
Quote from: puppypower on 21/12/2017 11:52:12The thing I don't understand is how can humans make heavier elements than the sun, using only mild earth conditions, yet also assume the sun, with far more extreme conditions can't do squat? Is it because humans can use fission and fusion, while we only allow the sun to use fusion, so we can cheat and play god? I think the main difference is that we have a much richer palate to begin with--the sun is >70% hydrogen, and only has impurities of other elements, while the earth has rich deposits of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, silicon, phosphorus and many metals like magnesium, aluminum, iron, titanium, as well as traces of elements that were formed by stars much more massive and violent than the sun (like platinum, rhodium, uranium etc.) which we have been able to use to do pretty much anything "impressive".
Quote from: chiralSPO on 21/12/2017 12:54:17Quote from: puppypower on 21/12/2017 11:52:12The thing I don't understand is how can humans make heavier elements than the sun, using only mild earth conditions, yet also assume the sun, with far more extreme conditions can't do squat? Is it because humans can use fission and fusion, while we only allow the sun to use fusion, so we can cheat and play god? I think the main difference is that we have a much richer palate to begin with--the sun is >70% hydrogen, and only has impurities of other elements, while the earth has rich deposits of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, silicon, phosphorus and many metals like magnesium, aluminum, iron, titanium, as well as traces of elements that were formed by stars much more massive and violent than the sun (like platinum, rhodium, uranium etc.) which we have been able to use to do pretty much anything "impressive".The inner planets of our solar system are rocky and contain all these larger elements. The outer planets are more gaseous. If you extrapolate, the sun should have substantial heavier elements being closer to the rocky planets than the gaseous ones. it should have the most heavy elements being number one in the alignment. The denser and heavier elements, from super nova remnants, would be the most likely to form the nucleation core of the collapsing dust and debris cloud, from which the solar system would form. This heavy atom core becomes the sun. Now the sun has the same precursors as the earth.
Another conceptual concern is say we assume the solar system formed from super nova remnants. If our solar system, via the sun is mostly hydrogen, why did the original star go supernova, if there was still so much hydrogen left over? One possible explanation is the extra hydrogen was on the surface, and not readily available to the core, so the core was fooled into thinking it is out of fuel.
If the excess hydrogen was on the outside, the blast profile should project these light materials furtherest out, while the heavies that from form the blast, would stay closer. If the nucleation center of the solar system is based on heavies and most of the hydrogen has been blasted farthest away, how does the sun get the hydrogen? It was already concluded that hydrogen and helium has too much entropy to form the nucleation center.
I tend to think that the discovery and idea of a supernova was so intoxicating, that many have become love blinded. It sort of like falling in love, and seeing what we want to see in your beloved, which may not always have the same logical consistency, without the rose colored glasses.
The thing I don't understand is how can humans make heavier elements than the sun, using only mild earth conditions, yet also assume the sun, with far more extreme conditions can't do squat?
In modern times, the most important star making material is water; H2O.
If the excess hydrogen was on the outside
metals like magnesium, aluminum, iron, titanium, as well as traces of elements that were formed by stars much more massive and violent than the sun (like platinum, rhodium, uranium etc.)
That leads to a different question. The very first stars in the universe could not have contained heavier elements and must have burnt fast and exploded in supernova. Was there enough time for enough of these to seed the whole universe with heavier elements?
I was thinking it may not have been the primary mechanism.
Sorry, I missed your reply. Well in a supernova explosion the debris will be ejected spherically. As the sphere of debris expands its density drops. The distances involved in the distribution of this material means that only a tiny proportion of heavier elements will reach any remote system and take maybe thousands or hundreds of thousands of years to do so. The formation of stars would likely happen much sooner than when this material arrives. So the stars themselves may well be depleted in heavier elements. The planets that are still forming are more likely to benefit from this as surface coatings. This still does not explain the iron cores of planets.The only reasonable explanation would be that supernovas were the norm in the very early universe. However, this would mean far more heavy elements present in stars such as the sun. So there may be a conundrum here.
So the stars themselves may well be depleted in heavier elements.
The planets that are still forming are more likely to benefit from this as surface coatings.
This still does not explain the iron cores of planets.