littleinstien said:
thanks, but how then would i accurately find energy out come for a specific quantity?
A specific quantity of carbon?
Well, one would have to know the branching ratios (or yield fractions) of the possible reactions, i.e. the fraction of
12C +
12C reactions that result in each of several products, and how much energy is produced for each reaction.
Then it's a matter of taking the mass of
12C, determining the number of
12C nuclei, divide that by half because 1 C-C fusion uses two nuclei, and multipy by the yield fraction and energy per reactions.
So the total energy would be N/2*(f
1Q
1 + f
2Q
2 + . . . + f
iQ
i) where f
i is the yield fraction of reaction i, and Q
i is the energy release per reaction i.
The number of atoms (nuclei) is just the mass (kg)*/(atom mass in amu *1.66E-27 kg/amu).
It's not really possible to get an 'accurate' answer because carbon fusion occurs under rather complicated circumstances that we cannot reproduce experimentally on Earth. We can produce 50 keV carbon ions, but they will not be +12 ions, and the target will not be ionized either, so one would have to go to higher energies. However, we cannot reproduce densities found in heavy stars (2 x 10
8 kg/m
3). So the best we can do is approximate with models of stars.