No. Stars cannot fall to Earth They are far beyond the influence of Earth's gravity and far larger and more massive than Earth. The stars are suns, some larger and brighter than our own but unimaginably far away. The remains of dead stars are composed of extremely dense forms of matter not found on Earth. The "falling stars" are not actually stars; they are meteors, small pieces of rock and metal that burn up as they travel through Earth's upper atmosphere at extreme speeds.
Because stars are rocks that get their light from the sun and if they die, (stars can die), they simply fall or they just stay there in the sky.
They fall from the sky
Rocks that fall off mountains are typically loose, unconsolidated rocks such as scree or talus. These rocks can become dislodged due to factors like weathering, erosion, seismic activity, or human interference, posing a risk to hikers and climbers.
They fall from the sky
Rocks are to geologists as stars are to astronomers.
Stars Don't Fall was created in 2005.
No. Stars are suns.
Stars do not fall. What is called a "falling star" is a meteor.Most meteors are pebbles or small rocks that are completely annihilated by their entry into our atmosphere (often at 50 to 100 km up) at enormous speeds (above 20 km/sec)
Stars are not rocks. Stars are massive balls of gas (mostly hydrogen and helium) that produce energy through nuclear fusion in their cores. Rocks, on the other hand, are solid materials made up of minerals and are found on planets and moons.
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Some massive stars will become neutron stars. When massive stars die they will either become neutron stars or black holes depending on how much mass is left behind.
The difference is in mass. Low to medium mass stars (up to about 8-10 solar masses) become white dwarfs. Massive stars (10 to 25 solar masses) become neutron stars. Stars above 25 solar masses tend to become black holes.