Science·Space Exploration·conceptual
Where Elements Come From
Explain stellar nucleosynthesis: the Big Bang produced mainly hydrogen and helium; main-sequence fusion builds elements up to iron; and supernovae produce elements heavier than iron and scatter them into space — meaning the atoms in our bodies were forged in ancient stars
Suggested ages 12–14
Evidence of understanding
- States that the Big Bang produced primarily hydrogen and helium, and that all heavier elements were made later in stars
- Explains that nuclear fusion in main-sequence stars converts hydrogen to helium and can continue building heavier elements up to iron
- Explains why elements heavier than iron require supernova explosions to form, and describes how supernovae distribute these elements into interstellar space where they become the raw material for new stars, planets, and life
Assessment prompt
If Where Elements Come From was told that the calcium in their bones and the iron in their blood were made inside ancient stars that exploded billions of years ago, could they explain the chain of events from the Big Bang to the formation of those atoms to how they ended up on Earth?
Standards alignment
No external standards are linked to this topic.