Yes, that is correct. A white dwarf has run out of fuel - it used it up.
Yes, that is correct. A white dwarf has run out of fuel - it used it up.
Yes, that is correct. A white dwarf has run out of fuel - it used it up.
Yes, that is correct. A white dwarf has run out of fuel - it used it up.
a dwarf star
A white dwarf is not considered a "dead star." It is considered a dying star, but not dead yet. A white dwarf is at its smallest state and could become a supernova when its center runs out of fuel to burn.
Yes - in the sense that it no longer produces energy. In other words, the star has run out of fuel for nuclear fusion.
the white dwarf star only uses the leftover thermal energy from its energy-prducing days keeps the star alive for a very long time dj
No, it is a red dwarf
after the star implodes an explodes it becomes a white dwarf or a black hole Because it has used up all of it's fuel and has nothing left to convert into energy (unless it can accrete additional fuel from a companion star).
White dwarf.
white dwarf
A star, after using all of it's fuel explodes. We call this a super nova, and after this the star will either become a black dwarf star (or maybe a white dwarf) or it will collapse in on its self creating a black hole.
No. A brown dwarf is a star that has too low a mass to start nuclear fusion. A black dwarf is a former white dwarf, the remnant of a low to medium mass star that ran out of fuel in its core.
When a red giant runs out of its fuel - helium - it will blow off its outer layers while the inner core collapses to form a white dwarf. The latter will gradually radiate away its energy to become a black dwarf.
Carbon and oxygen are the two main elements that make up a white dwarf star. These elements are the end products of nuclear fusion in the core of the star before it exhausted its nuclear fuel and collapsed to form a white dwarf.