Positron137 said:
Why doesn't iron fusion release energy? (Sorry if that's a redundant question which has already been answered previously by someone's response.)
Well, to understand that you need to understand how fusion releases energy in the first place. Fusing two atoms together releases energy because the MASS of the new atom is LESS than the combined mass of the two atoms prior to fusing. This missing mass is released as energy.
There's something known as Binding Energy. Basically, it's the energy required to completely take apart an object. That is, take every single particle and remove them from their bonds and throw them waaaaaay out away from each other. For fusion, what we look at is called the
Nuclear Binding Energy.
This nuclear binding energy is typically described as "binding energy per nucleon" because it allows us to compare nuclei with different amounts of nucleons. (Particles in a nucleus)
Because of the way the protons and neutrons attract and repel inside the nucleus, different configurations and numbers of these nucleons results in different amounts of binding energy per nucleon. The MORE binding energy per nucleon, the more energy is required to pull them apart.
Now think about this. If we have to ADD energy to pull them apart, then they must RELEASE energy when they come together! (If you don't understand that, just trust me. They do.) So a more tightly bound nucleus, aka one with more binding energy per nucleon, gave up more energy per particle than a nucleus with less binding energy per nucleon.
So once you get to Nickel-56, the very next step in the chain, Zinc-60, has LESS binding energy per nucleon. What does this mean? This means that going from a nucleus with MORE binding energy per nucleon to a nucleus with LESS cannot release any net energy! It's not as tightly bound, so it can't release as much energy as the Nickel-56 did.
Or, to look at it a different way, look at the mass of all the particles before and after the fusion. A single nucleus of Nickel-56 + an alpha particle has LESS mass than a single Zinc-60 nucleus. So when the Nickel-56 and alpha particle fuse the process gobbles some of the energy up and turns it back into mass instead of releasing some of the mass as energy.
So, once the core of a star reaches this point and starts to collapse, fusion does start to occur once the temperature reaches the ignition point. But since Zinc-60 doesn't release energy, this reaction eats up thermal energy that would have opposed the collapse. So there's nothing to oppose the collapse and it accelerates, eventually turning the core into a neutron star or black hole.