Redirected from Carbon-nitrogen cycle
The CNO cycle may also be the dominant cause of nitrogen and oxygen production.
Specifically, the CNO cycle looks like this:
12C + 1H | → | 13N + γ |
13N | → | 13C + e+ + νe |
13C + 1H | → | 14N + γ |
14N + 1H | → | 15O + γ |
15O | → | 15N + e+ + νe |
15N + 1H | → | 12C + 4He |
The cycle results in the fusion of four hydrogen nuclei (1H, protons) into a single helium nucleus (4He, alpha particle), which supplies energy to the star in accordance with Einstein's equation. Ordinary carbon serves as a catalyst in this set of reactions and is regenerated.
See also: Triple-alpha process
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