vy canis majoris in the constellation canis major
When a star burns up all of its hydrogen,it becomes red in color.As hydrogen is the fuel for star and it will burst after it.
No, stars with the most hydrogen have the shortest lives. The more massive a star is, the faster it burns its fuel, and the sooner the core is depleted.
Hydrogen "burns" as it were, in "nuclear fusion" reactions to give helium and release energy.
Heavier stars will usually burn faster than lighter stars.
The star's mass. More mass will make the star hotter, and will increase the pressure in the center; this will make the star burn its fuel faster.When a star is on the "main sequence", it burns hydrogen-1, converting it into helium-4.
An engine that burns fuel inside itself is officially known as an internal combustion engine. Most cars have these.
It is just a figure of speech. A Star(sun is also a star) dies when its fuel supply runs out (ie) it burns out.
A Star Is Burns was created on 1995-03-05.
The star burns as a young star. Then as the star ages its fusion reaction begins to burn out of control and it grows in size to that of a red giant. Finally as it reach a critical mass it runs out of fuel to support itself. The star begins to collapses on itself and explodes into a supernova leaving behind a neutron star or a white dwarf.
For most of a star's life, the main fuel is protium (hydrogen-1), which is fused into helium-4.
bec. its everything that burns
That's the motor, which burns fuel and propels the boat.