The Sun is losing mass because of
fusion reactions occurring within its core, leading to the emission of
electromagnetic energy and neutrinos, and by the ejection of matter with the
solar wind. It is expelling about /year. The mass loss rate will increase when the Sun enters the
red giant stage, climbing to /year when it reaches the
tip of the red-giant branch. This will rise to /year on the
asymptotic giant branch, before peaking at a rate of 10−5 to 10−4 /year as the Sun generates a
planetary nebula. By the time the Sun becomes a degenerate
white dwarf, it will have lost 46% of its starting mass. The mass of the Sun has been decreasing since the time it formed. This occurs through two processes in nearly equal amounts. First, in the
Sun's core, hydrogen is converted into helium through
nuclear fusion, in particular the
p–p chain, and this reaction converts some mass into energy in the form of
gamma ray photons. Most of this energy eventually
radiates away from the Sun. Second, high-energy protons and electrons in the atmosphere of the Sun are ejected directly into outer space as the
solar wind and
coronal mass ejections. The original mass of the Sun at the time it reached the
main sequence remains uncertain. The early Sun had much higher mass-loss rates than at present, and it may have lost anywhere from 1–7% of its natal mass over the course of its main-sequence lifetime. == Related units ==