You can't just destroy it - it would take a huge amount of energy to tear it apart. About the only way I can think of to "destroy" it - in away - is that it collides with a black hole, and the mass of the neutron star becoming part of the black hole - or the neutron star itself becoming a black hole, if its mass increases (due to additional mass falling into the neutron star).
You can't just destroy it - it would take a huge amount of energy to tear it apart. About the only way I can think of to "destroy" it - in away - is that it collides with a black hole, and the mass of the neutron star becoming part of the black hole - or the neutron star itself becoming a black hole, if its mass increases (due to additional mass falling into the neutron star).
Neutron stars do not have fuel. A neutron star is a remnant of a star that has already died.
the name pulsar is given to a neutron star that rotates
It cannot get any bigger.
Good sentence for neutron star - WOW ! see that;s a neutron star !!
When the gravity of a massive star overcomes neutron degeneracy pressure, it can result in the star collapsing further to form a black hole. This occurs when the mass of the star is above a certain threshold known as the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit, causing the neutron degeneracy pressure to be insufficient to support the star against gravity.
There's no mass range that's between "collapses into a neutron star or pulsar" and "collapses into a black hole". It'll be one or the other.
Good sentence for neutron star - WOW ! see that;s a neutron star !!
It will probably explode as a supernova, leaving either a neutron star or black hole.
No. A neutron star ts the remnant of a massive star that exploded.
A neutron star is a stellar remnant
Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.Then, depending on the remaining mass of the star, it will collapse into a white dwarf, a neutron star (aka pulsar), or a black hole.