Massive stars.
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2nd Answer:
Yes, massive stars, but ones with another star like a red giant orbiting each other.
The to-be supernova 'sucks' material from the other star near it until its mass is large enough to make the star collapse and burst.
Very massive ones ... 2-3 times solar mass is pretty much a minimum.
Generally O & maybe B stars will explode as a supernova. It all depends on the mass of the star.
a large star exploding causes a supernova
Main-sequence.
No, only large stars go supernova when nuclear fusion breaks down. While white dwarfs can go supernova in some instances, brown dwarfs are failed stars which are not powered by nuclear fusion.
No. A neutron star is left behind after a supernova. However, some gamma ray bursts may result from a collision between neutron stars.
Yes. All pulsars and neutron stars are the remnants of a supernova explosion.
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we all die
No, only large stars go supernova when nuclear fusion breaks down. While white dwarfs can go supernova in some instances, brown dwarfs are failed stars which are not powered by nuclear fusion.
Heavy stars go supernova at the end of their lives.
Really big stars, which die in supernova explosions.
they go boom, and make a supernova
Heavy stars usaly go
They don't. Stars perfrom nuclear fusion until they run out of resources, at which point they go supernova.
the color of the stars usually determines how old and how hot the star is it can also determine when the star will go supernova
Of course. It is estimated that millions, if not billions, of stars go supernova and "die", every year.
Massive Stars.
They supernova.
Supernova
SuperNova