Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.
Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.
Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.
Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.
Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.
A binary star in which mass is transferred from one star to the other.
It's not got an exact definition, but astronomers usually mean a star of about 8 times the mass of the Sun or higher.
A star is a spheroidal plasma converting mass into energy by nuclear fusion.
a low mass protostar is the begining formation of a low mass star. a low mass protostar is formed by a nebula (stellar nursery), like a cloud in space, where all stares come from. the definition of protostar is: a collection of gas, and dust who`s gravitational pull is causing it to collapse on itself & form a star. a LOW MASS protostar just has a LOWER MASS then a HIGH MASS protostar. Your Welcome:)
A binary star is a star system consisting of two stars orbiting around their common centre of mass
High mass.
Vega has about 2.1 times the mass of the Sun. That's a fairly large mass; but you'll have to choose where you set the limit between "medium-mass" and "high-mass"! It is definitely not "low-mass"; in general, low-mass stars, i.e. red dwarves, can't be seen with the naked eye, even if they are in our immediate neighborhood. (The very closest star after the Sun is Proxima Centauri, and it can't be seen with the naked eye.) The main definition of a high mass star is a star that can eventually explode as a supernova. For that the star needs to be around at least 8 times the Sun's mass. I would say Vega is best thought of as "medium mass".
Vega has about 2.1 times the mass of the Sun. That's a fairly large mass; but you'll have to choose where you set the limit between "medium-mass" and "high-mass"! It is definitely not "low-mass"; in general, low-mass stars, i.e. red dwarves, can't be seen with the naked eye, even if they are in our immediate neighborhood. (The very closest star after the Sun is Proxima Centauri, and it can't be seen with the naked eye.) The main definition of a high mass star is a star that can eventually explode as a supernova. For that the star needs to be around at least 8 times the Sun's mass. I would say Vega is best thought of as "medium mass".
The definition of star connection is a connection of the ends of phase windings at the star point.
The Sun is a medium mass star on the main sequence.
It can't. A blue star is a high-mass star. A yellow star has a medium mass.
The sun is an intermediate-mass star.