Mostly in galaxies, where they can form Super Massive Black Holes.
Pulsars are located every where around the universe keep in mind pulsars are neutron stars so that means they were formed by large stars that have aged and died out
as neutrons have heaviest mass in an atom,and also neutrons are major constituents of neutron stars.so neutron stars ae most densest in the universe
The first neutron stars likely formed some time in the first 600 million years after the Big Bang when large stars of the first or second generation died.
as neutrons have heaviest mass in an atom,and also neutrons are major constituents of neutron stars.so neutron stars ae most densest in the universe
Considering the other oddity's in the Universe; Neutron stars, pulsars, Wolf Rayet stars, magnetar or even hypernovas, I don't think black holes are that odd.
Some massive stars will become neutron stars. When massive stars die they will either become neutron stars or black holes depending on how much mass is left behind.
It's possible that two neutron stars could collide; if that happened, the combined mass & gravitational attraction might be enough to collapse the combined object into a black hole. Otherwise, it will be a neutron star until the end of the universe.
It means it's mass is very high and its volume is very low. A standard neutron star has a mass thousands of times greater than the sun, but a volume of a small city. This ridiculously high density and pressure also account for the high temperatures of neutron stars. PS. Quark stars are denser than neutron.
Stars that become white dwarfs die but become black holes . Neutron stars are born from a Super Nova that stored its energy and became a neutron star.
Black holes, Quasars, Dark Matter, Rouge Planets, Pulsars, Neutron stars, supernova, Gravity and Human Beings.
Neutron stars are considered stellar remnants, hence are already dead. What you see is just a hot and dead core. It will remain floating for the duration of the universe unless affected by external forces, slowly cooling.
The smallest stars are called neutron stars.They typically have a diameter of only 12kmthe smallest star is the neutron star from the word "neutron"