The carbon nucleus, 12C, reappears at the end of the cycle and can be regarded as a catalyst for the reaction:
Because nitrogen (N) and oxygen (O) intermediates are involved, the cycle is often termed the carbon-nitrogen-oxygen cycle or CNO cycle.
The carbon cycle is very strongly temperature dependent and becomes the dominant energy-producing mechanism at core temperatures exceeding about 20 million K. It is therefore thought to be the major source of energy in hot massive stars of spectral types O, B, and A. The carbon cycle was proposed by Hans Bethe and independently by Carl von Weizsächer in 1938. See also proton-proton chain reaction.