stars have convective cores, intermediate-mass stars have radiative cores, and low-mass stars are fully convective.Main sequence stars are distinguished by the primary energy-generating mechanism in their central region, which joins four hydrogen nuclei to form a single helium atom through
thermonuclear fusion. The Sun is an example of this class of stars. Once stars with the
mass of the Sun form, the core region reaches thermal equilibrium after about 100 million (108) years and becomes radiative. This means the generated energy is transported out of the core via
radiation and
conduction rather than through mass transport in the form of
convection. Above this spherical
radiation zone lies a small
convection zone just below the
outer atmosphere. At lower
stellar mass, the outer convection shell takes up an increasing proportion of the envelope, and for stars with a mass of around (35% of the mass of the Sun) or less (including
failed stars) the entire star is convective, including the core region. These very low-mass stars (VLMS) occupy the
late range of the
M-type main-sequence stars, or
red dwarf. The VLMS form the primary stellar component of the
Milky Way at over 70% of the total population. The low-mass end of the VLMS range reaches about , below which ordinary (non-
deuterium)
hydrogen fusion does not take place and the object is designated a
brown dwarf. The temperature of the core region for a VLMS decreases with decreasing mass, while the density increases. For a star with , the core temperature is about while the density is around . Even at the low end of the temperature range, the hydrogen and helium in the core region is fully ionized. of the relative energy output (ε) of proton–proton (p-p), CNO, and
triple-α fusion processes at different temperatures (T). The dashed line shows the combined energy generation of the p-p and CNO processes within a star. Below about , energy production in the stellar core is predominantly through the
proton–proton chain reaction, a process requiring only hydrogen. For stars above this mass, the energy generation comes increasingly from the
CNO cycle, a hydrogen fusion process that uses intermediary atoms of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. In the Sun, only 1.5% of the net energy comes from the CNO cycle. For stars at where the core temperature reaches 18 MK, half the energy production comes from the CNO cycle and half from the pp chain. The CNO process is more temperature-sensitive than the pp chain, with most of the energy production occurring near the very center of the star. This results in a stronger thermal gradient, which creates convective instability. Hence, the core region is convective for stars above about . For all masses of stars, as the core hydrogen is consumed, the temperature increases so as to maintain pressure equilibrium. This results in an increasing rate of energy production, which in turn causes the luminosity of the star to increase. The lifetime of the core hydrogen–fusing phase decreases with increasing stellar mass. For a star with the mass of the Sun, this period is around ten billion years. At the lifetime is 65 million years while at the core hydrogen–fusing period is only six million years. The longest-lived stars are fully convective red dwarfs, which can stay on the main sequence for hundreds of billions of years or more. ==Subgiant stars==