by Psnarf » Sat Feb 01, 2014 4:13 pm
Ditto; what starsurfer said.
I learned the supernova onion sequence, that is, the elements that fuse starting with hydrogen fusion to iron, which can't fuse due to insufficient energy leading to a big badaboom: H, He, C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and finally Fe. In the Periodic Table of Elements, hydrogen fusion is simple to understand, that is, 1 + 1 = 2: add the number of protons to get the atomic number of helium. Then somehow 2 + 2 = carbon6, which I don't yet understand. Then for the sequences between carbon and silicon just skip one element in the table of elements for atomic numbers carbon6 --> oxygen8 --> neon10 --> magnesium12 --> silicon14; ...then comes iron26 (?). Just wondering where the sulfur16 came from. Perhaps a fission reaction in the supernova soup?
[Disclaimer: I earned highest marks for inorganic chemistry in the late 60's. I'm not a "new clear" physicist, nor do I play one on TV.]
Ditto; what starsurfer said.
I learned the supernova onion sequence, that is, the elements that fuse starting with hydrogen fusion to iron, which can't fuse due to insufficient energy leading to a big badaboom: H, He, C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and finally Fe. In the Periodic Table of Elements, hydrogen fusion is simple to understand, that is, 1 + 1 = 2: add the number of protons to get the atomic number of helium. Then somehow 2 + 2 = carbon6, which I don't yet understand. Then for the sequences between carbon and silicon just skip one element in the table of elements for atomic numbers carbon6 --> oxygen8 --> neon10 --> magnesium12 --> silicon14; ...then comes iron26 (?). Just wondering where the sulfur16 came from. Perhaps a fission reaction in the supernova soup?
[Disclaimer: I earned highest marks for inorganic chemistry in the late 60's. I'm not a "new clear" physicist, nor do I play one on TV.]