Depending on how big the star was, it could be a white dwarf, a neutron star, or a black hole.
A star that has collapsed under gravity and is made of neutrons is called a neutron star. Neutron stars are extremely dense and have a strong gravitational pull due to the collapsed core of a massive star. They are the remnants of supernova explosions.
A collapsed star is typically referred to as a black hole. Black holes form when massive stars run out of fuel and collapse under gravity, creating a region of spacetime with such intense gravitational pull that nothing, not even light, can escape from it.
depends on how strong.... when a massive star's life ends and it collapses on itself extremely quickly... it forms a black hole and the black hole has an EXTREMELY strong gravitational pull..... so i think the answer is black hole
Any two objects with mass will have a gravitational force. The orbit of planets around stars depends on the gravitational pull of the star. The Earth exerts a gravitational pull on its moon but the moon also exerts a pull on the Earth.
That description may refer to any of the end-phases in the lifetime of a star: a white dwarf; a neutron star; or a black hole.
A collapsed star with gravitational pull strong enough to prevent light from escaping is known as a black hole. This phenomenon occurs when a massive star exhausts its nuclear fuel and undergoes a supernova explosion, leaving behind a dense core that collapses under its own gravity. The gravitational force of a black hole is so intense that it creates a region of spacetime that light cannot escape from, known as the event horizon.
A collapsed star after using its fuel is called a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole, depending on its mass. White dwarfs are remnants of low to medium-mass stars, while neutron stars are remnants of massive stars. Black holes are formed from the most massive stars and have gravitational pull strong enough to trap even light.
A star in which light cannot escape because of its immense gravitational pull at its surface is called a black hole.
Neutron Star
No. A black dwarf is dense and has the mass of an entire star, so the gravitational pull would still be quite strong.
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
A black hole is a collapsed star that is very small and a gravitational pull that is so strong that light cannot escape from it. No, they do not have outer colling layers. They just pull in anything that gets near it and crushes it to atoms. We can tell they exist by the effect they have on nearby objects.