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Stars are astronomical bodies that are (usually) mainly composed of Hydrogen, Helium, and Lithium. They are massive enough that their gravity compresses the matter to the point where nuclear fusion occurs, which creates a lot of heat and tends to make stars output radiation along a blackbody curve. Typically the radiative output is significant in the visible spectrum making stars very bright objects.
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Is it possible for liquid metallic hydrogen to be present in a star
I was just curious since some of the conditions can occur on stars is it possible for their to be a layer of liquid metallic hydrogen present in a star? …