What actually happens to the types of stars is that the low mass will turn into a white dwarf and the medium mass will turn into a black dwarf and reproduce a nebula
The five primary types of stars are the red dwarf star, yellow star, blue giant star, giant star, and super giant star. The billions of stars in the universe fall under one of these classifications.
dwarf stars,giant stars,main sequence stars
Capella has four parts: Two large stars (Aa and Ab) and two faint red dwarf stars. The combined mass of the two larger stars is 5.25 in solar mass and 21.4 in solar diameter.
No. But the sun is one of the smaller types of star called 'yellow dwarf''. There are smaller and bigger stars also.
What actually happens to the types of stars is that the low mass will turn into a white dwarf and the medium mass will turn into a black dwarf and reproduce a nebula
What actually happens to the types of stars is that the low mass will turn into a white dwarf and the medium mass will turn into a black dwarf and reproduce a nebula
dwarf stars -Sydney-
no, dwarf stars don't have enough mass
A Main Sequence star and a White Dwarf.
I assume you mean a DWARF STAR. There are different types of dwarf stars; the white dwarfs are fairly hot - but the reason they are dim is that they have a very small surface area.
No, not all dwarf stars are failed stars. Only brown dwarfs are called "failed stars".
None. No planet or dwarf planet contains stars.
Yes there are a few more [See related link for more information].--- Main sequence stars -----Red dwarf Yellow dwarfBlue dwarf (hypothetical)--- Degenerate stars --------White dwarf Black dwarf (hypothetical)--- Sub stellar stars -------Brown dwarf.
The five primary types of stars are the red dwarf star, yellow star, blue giant star, giant star, and super giant star. The billions of stars in the universe fall under one of these classifications.
Dwarf galaxies merely refer to the size of the galaxy itself, not the stars in the galaxy, so no.
yes