Kinda-sorta, but it would be more of crash. Neutron stars have very high gravity, so you'd come plungning down and then turn into a smear on the surface.
No. You would be instantly crushed by the gravity if you were to try. Before you got to the surface you would be ripped apart by tidal forces.
A neutron star is so dense, that apart from a direct collision from another neutron star, the chances are slim to impossible.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
A neutron star is a stellar remnant
Yes far bigger. A red giant would cover the distance from the Sun to the Earth. A neutron star could be the size of New York City.
Yes. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star.
A neutron star is so dense, that apart from a direct collision from another neutron star, the chances are slim to impossible.
Good sentence for neutron star - WOW ! see that;s a neutron star !!
Good sentence for neutron star - WOW ! see that;s a neutron star !!
No. While a neutron star has more mass than the sun, it is compressed into a very small area about the size of a city.
Neutron stars do not have fuel. A neutron star is a remnant of a star that has already died.
No. A neutron star ts the remnant of a massive star that exploded.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
A neutron star is a stellar remnant
Yes far bigger. A red giant would cover the distance from the Sun to the Earth. A neutron star could be the size of New York City.
Depending on how big the star was, it could be a white dwarf, a neutron star, or a black hole.
It is still called a neutron star. Depending on how we observe it, it may also be called a pulsar.
A Neutron Star