Stars with a huge mass will consume its fuel faster. in the end it becomes a supernova and soon after (in star-time) it will implode. Depending on its mass, it might become a super-massive black hole or a little dwarf where only one teaspoon of its mass will weigh in at many tons.
Exactly what happens depends on the mass of the star. Low mass stars first expand into giants, then shrink to white dwarfs. Stars with a little more mass than the Sun end up as neutron stars; stars with considerably more mass with the sun end up as black holes.
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
Large mass starts are blue (when they are young) or Red (when they get old).
The fate of an old star depends on its mass. Small stars will burn, essentially, forever. Medium mass stars like our Sun will eventually expand into a red giant, and collapse into a white dwarf. Very large stars will explode as supernova stars; these end up as neutron stars or if their initial mass is large enough, as black holes.
CARTER Payne
High-mass stars might become black holes, if the remaining matter (after the supernova explosion) is sufficiently large.
Mass decides a stars ultimate fate.
They explode
Gravitational pressure prevents stars of extremely large mass from forming as this pressure would likely initiate nuclear fusion earlier, preventing the star from accumulating enough mass to exceed the upper limit for star formation. This prevents the formation of supermassive stars and instead leads to the formation of smaller stars.
The mass remains the same, the star becomes more and more dense as the volume decreases
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.
yes but explain what happens when it is