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No, heavy rain does not usually occur until the mature stage.
The Mature stage
White dwarf stage. Its shrinks to a lot extent in this stage. Edit: A high mass star is usually one that becomes a supergiant then a supernova. Eventually this should leave either a neutron star or a black hole, depending on the mass of the star. The previous answer is for low mass stars.
During Mitosis
Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm during the first stage of respiration.
Supernova
the fourth stage of a star is "supergiant" and its also the hottest stage
It is a supergiant.(the late stage in the life cycle of a massive starin which the core heats up, heavy elements formedby fusion, and expands; it can eventually explodeto what scientist call a supernova.)-Missy K
between giant and supergiant stages of life
Rigel, which is also known as "Beta Orionis," is a B-type blue supergiant that is the sixth brightest star in the night sky. Similar to Betelguese, Rigel is fusing heavy elements in its core and will pass its supergiant stage soon (on an astronomical timescale), either collapsing in the case of a supernova or shedding its outer layers and turning into a white dwarf. It serves as the left foot of Orion, the hunter.[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_(constellation)
i think its a little bit heavy of the uterus
No, Betelgeuse has already past that stage and has become a red supergiant.
because giant and supergiant stage is very short
They are combined during synthesis.
No, heavy rain does not usually occur until the mature stage.
It is the cumulonimbus that produces heavy rains.
Microbes such as algae and bacteria during the larval stage and sugar-heavy nectars and plant juices during the adult stage are what male mosquitoes eat. The male of the insects in question (Culicidae family) do not eat blood, which is consumed only be female mosquitoes in order to lay eggs.