Want this question answered?
None at all/ The life cycle of a star is based on it's initial mass, not where it was formed.
mass
the main sequence
a star with 2-3 stellar masses would become a red supergiant then a supernova and then become a neutron star.
Protostar!
None at all/ The life cycle of a star is based on it's initial mass, not where it was formed.
The more the mass the shorter their life cycle (the more quickly they use their fuel)
its mass
mass
A star's "life cycle" depends mostly on its initial mass; everything is determined by mass. Small, low-mass stars may shine essentially forever, while very large high-mass stars may grow old and go supernova in only a few dozen million years.
the main sequence
The more massive a star is, the less its life time.
This happens because the rock cycle keeps occuring and every time the rock cycle happens the sedimentary rock comes together better and will eventually be a solid mass of sediment
a star with 2-3 stellar masses would become a red supergiant then a supernova and then become a neutron star.
Protostar!
Mass and size
It will get wet.