Not necessarily, but the likelyhood for matter from one star falling on the other and increasing its mass beyond the threshold for a black hole might be a bit larger than usual.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
No. A black hole will remain a black hole. A neutron star is a remnant of a star not massive enough to become a black hole.
Perhaps you mean stellar black hole. Stellar means related to a star, so that refers to a black hole that results from the collapse of a star. Actually that's the ONLY confirmed way to create a black hole (other ways are a bit hypothetical), but the term is also used to refer to a black hole which has approximately the mass of a star - to distinguish it from the supermassive galactic black holes in the center of most galaxies, as well as the intermediate-mass black holes found in star clusters.
If it was not a huge star, it will probably become a black dwarf. If it was a huge star, there is a chance of it becoming a black hole.
Since the radius of a black hole is directly proportional to the mass it contains, one can safely say a massive star can make a black hole big; the more massive the star, the larger the black hole. Note that, depending on composition and some other factors, a heavy star may or may not blow out much of its mass in a spectacular explosion (supernova) and the small remnant it leaves behind may or may not be a black hole - it could potentially become a pulsar or neutron star instead. Black holes may also be companions to massive stars, and their size governed by how much mass they accumulate - since the star may supply the black hole with a fairly continuous stream of matter captured by gravitational effects from the companion star and thus the black hole continues to grow in size.
A black hole does not create a star. A black hole is formed when a star dies.
A black hole originated as a star, that is, the star converted to a black hole.
Yes, a star Super Novas when it dies and sometimes the explosion is so vast, it creates a fissure that becomes a black hole.
It takes a dying star 20 times the size of our sun to create a black hole. So no they can't.
Don't tap the screen at all and the black hole will pop up
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
No. A black hole will remain a black hole. A neutron star is a remnant of a star not massive enough to become a black hole.
A dead or dying star will start to create a black hole
The mass of a black hole increases when something else falls into it. That is frequently another star. It could be a planet.
The collapses star gets squeezed by collapses gas and turns into a black hole.
A star must be at least 25 times the mass of the sun to form a black hole, though only a fraction of that mass is incorporated into the black hole.
Perhaps you mean stellar black hole. Stellar means related to a star, so that refers to a black hole that results from the collapse of a star. Actually that's the ONLY confirmed way to create a black hole (other ways are a bit hypothetical), but the term is also used to refer to a black hole which has approximately the mass of a star - to distinguish it from the supermassive galactic black holes in the center of most galaxies, as well as the intermediate-mass black holes found in star clusters.