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I'm interested in whether there are a small subset of elements that are by far the most common in a planet's early stages of formation and a wider range are formed slowly over time through chemical reaction, or if a very wide range of the periodic table can be initially found from the start.

Obviously every planet it unique, but I'm asking about whether there's a common scenario / elemental ratio present in the hot cataclysmic early stages of a planet's formation, or rather it's pretty much diverse from the start. Do most elements generally exist in a planet during early formation, or is it a small subset?

J.Todd
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Elements are not formed through chemical reactions or in planets (except through nuclear decay) . They are formed in stars through nuclear reactions.

Your heavier elements can't even be formed in your typical star. It takes a supernova.

So pretty much everything the planet is made of is there from the start.

DKNguyen
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