It does! There is helium-helium fusion, and later the CNO cycle that go on. It just so happens that these reactions don't kick in until the star is very old and very compressed. Once you get to iron, fusion is no longer favorable: proton-proton repulsion (like charges and all that) stops the process. Some old stars have huge shells of iron because of this.
If both possibilites 1&2 happen, then won't the stars also have small amounts of elements like
Lithium, Beryllium, Boron, Fluorine, Neon, Sodium, Magnesium, Aluminium, Silicon, Phosphorus, Sulphur, Chlorine, Argon, Potassium, Calcium, Scandium, Titanium, Vanadium and Manganese?
(Basically all the elements from proton number 1 - 26)
Why does the cycle involve carbon, nitrogen and oxygen, why not any consecutive xyz element below iron? eg. silicon, phosphorus and sulphur.
Why does the cycle not involve more then 3 elements, wxyz? eg. boron, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen.
Answer two: they just do. Photons are one of those things that it's best not to ask many questions about. Until you are ready to learn quantum mechanics, and are used to being constantly confused, that is. :)
Try me. If you don't, then i will never be able to know if i am or am not ready.
For PP chains, nearing the end of the chain, why won't the 2 Helium-3s just fuse to form a Beryllium atom with 2 neutrons? Why must it form a Helium-4 and give out 2 Hydrogen atoms?
When will gamma rays be released? When will beta-rays be released? When will alpha-particles be released?
If Carbon-12 can just capture a proton and release gamma-rays, can other elements do so too? eg. Vanadium-51 capturing a proton and releasing gamma-rays.
In the CNO cycle, when
The mass-12 isotope of Carbon captures a proton and emits a gamma-ray, producing the mass-13 isotope of Nitrogen.
Why isn't the isotope called a mass-13 isotope of Carbon, why a mass-13 isotope of Nitrogen? What is the difference between a mass-13 isotope of Carbon and a mass-13 isotope of Nitrogen?
If there is a PP chain, proton-proton chain, why not a EE chain, electron-electron chain? Or a NN chain, neutron-neutron chain?
How does a catalyst work?