Yes. Stars form within a nebula.
No. A nebula is a billion, if not more, times larger than our Sun
No. A neutron star is quite small, generally only a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
Yes, a nebula is far larger than a neutron star. A neutron star is a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
A nebula is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen and helium gas and plasma. A Nebula can be over 2.5 million light years across. The largest star is a mere 1.7 billion miles in diameter
Yes.
No. A nebula is a billion, if not more, times larger than our Sun
No. A neutron star is quite small, generally only a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
A Galaxy is far bigger than a nebula.
No. A neutron star is quite small, generally only a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
Yes, a nebula is far larger than a neutron star. A neutron star is a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
A nebula is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen and helium gas and plasma. A Nebula can be over 2.5 million light years across. The largest star is a mere 1.7 billion miles in diameter
The nebula in a galaxy is a dead star, long dead, possibly about to turn into a black hole. actually, its the opposite: nebula is like a cloud of space trash. when the "cloud" gets too big, it explodes. the bigger the explosion, the bigger the new star.
No, a neutron star can't become a nebula. A neutron star is not made of atomic matter, has less mass than a nebula, and has no mechanism by which to expand.
The largest star known to man is called the Pistol Star. It lies in the center of the Pistol Nebula in the Milky Way and is believed to be 100 times bigger than the sun.
No. The sun is much closer to the size of the star that exploded almost 1,000 years ago, whose expanding outer shell is seen today as the Crab Nebula.
Yes.
Yes. A nebula is just a big gas cloud. A galaxy will contain many nebulas.