Stars:
Canis Majoris
Sirus
Polaris
Pollux
Arcturus
Rigel
Eta Caranae
Vega
Aldebaran
Antares
Mu Cephei
Wolf 359
Proxima Centauri
Regulus
Alnitak
Those are all of the ones I know.
There are approximately 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars in the visible Universe, some have just died, some have just been created.
To name them all, at one a second would take over 316,887,646,000,000 years
So I won't bother.
See related question for some of them.
Rigel, Betelgeuse, Polaris, Sirus, Proxima Centauri (the closest after our sun),
VY Canis Majoris (the largest known star), Vega, Capella, Deneb ... Meryl Streep,
Tom Cruise, Will Ferrell, Jim Carrey big diper, small diper...
Sure. Will anyone else anywhere ever use your name for it? Probably not. Those "star registry" companies are, basically, scams. They "name" a star whatever you want, publish that name in a book along with the "names" that other suckers have purchased (which they'll likely try to sell to you at some outrageous price), and then ... well, then, the world goes on exactly as it was before. Astronomers don't suddenly start talking about the new planet they've discovered orbiting MyPetCatSmudgie or interesting developments in the nebula near Mermaidania. There's nothing to stop some other "star registry" company from "selling" the exact same star to someone else. For that matter, there's really very little to stop the same company from selling the exact same star to someone else, though there are hundreds of thousands of cataloged stars, so unless they get exceptionally lazy there's no real need for them to do that.
= Other names of stars: =
The star named Rigel marks the left foot of Orion the Hunter. Deneb (Arabic for "tail") marks the tail of Cygnus the Swan. The star scientifically called Gamma Gruis is named Ras Alkurki (Arabic for "Head of the Crane") because it marks the head of Grus theCrane. Ras is Arabic for "head", andAlkurkiis Arabic for "the crane" .Some stars were given names with meanings having nothing to do with their parent constellation. For example, there is a star in Lepus the Hare named Nihal, meaning "The Camels Quenching Their Thirst" in Arabic, because ancient Arabians saw the constellation Lepus as a caravan of camels instead of ahare.
It depends how the star dies. If it is bout the size of the sun, it'll swell up and then start to shrink, puffing out gas(Which surrounds it in a nebula). All that would be left is it's core, which is a white dwarf. If it's a star bigger than our sun, it goes out with a bang, exploding. All is left is a supernova, and a black hole or a neutron star
There are approximately 200 -> 400 billion stars in the Milky Way. See related for a list of some stars
The most well known White Dwarf is a binary companion of Sirius. It is named Sirius B.
the pulsar at the center of the crab nebula
Sun, Sirius, Rigel, Betelgeuse. In fact all named stars are in our galaxy
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
A dull star
A dead star is one that no longer experiences nuclear fusion. This happens when a star runs out of hydrogen it can use to convert to helium.
neutron star
black dwarf
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.
Dr. Cornelius Evazan
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
A dull star
Marvin Gay btw he is not gay that's just his last name.
A dead star is one that no longer experiences nuclear fusion. This happens when a star runs out of hydrogen it can use to convert to helium.
it is result of a dead star
neutron star
Yes Umaga is dead.
Technically a dead star is when a star no longer undergoes nuclear fusion. Depending on the mass of the original star this will either be a white dwarf, neutron star or black hole. These are called stellar remnants.
It is not existing
black dwarf