by soaking up helium form the sun=]] dont worry this is the right answer i got the answer frfom my teacher!!!!!
It will become a Red Giant and then it will slowly fade away into a new nebula.
No, the Sun is not a planetary nebula; it is a main-sequence star. A planetary nebula is a stage in the life cycle of certain stars, typically those with a mass similar to or less than that of the Sun, that occurs after they exhaust their nuclear fuel and expel their outer layers. The Sun will eventually become a red giant and then evolve into a planetary nebula in about 5 billion years, but currently, it is still in the main-sequence phase of its life.
Yes, the Orion Nebula is much larger than the sun. The Orion Nebula is a diffuse nebula, while the sun is a star. The Orion Nebula is approximately 24 light-years across, while the sun is about 864,000 miles in diameter.
it contracts together to were it can't hold any more.
no
If the Helix Nebula was an ocean, our Sun would be like a grain of sand. Nebulas are so huge that it takes light thousands of years to cross one, and light is the fastest thing we know of.
The Solar Nebula, which does not exist anymore.
No, the Sun doesn't have enough mass to Supernova, it will become a Red Giant over 5 billion years then slowly form into a Nebula.
No, the sun will not become a planetary nebula. It is not massive enough to undergo the process that leads to the formation of a planetary nebula. Instead, the sun will eventually evolve into a red giant and then shed its outer layers to form a planetary nebula.
The sun is a star.
Orion Nebula is much further from the earth than the Sun is.
If the nebula is gravitationally unstable, it collapsing & forming stars!