Smaller stars like our own expand into a red giant and then eventually collapse into a white dwarf, the more larger stars like a bright giant star expand into a hyper giant or a super giant. Super giant stars can go supernova and collapse into a neutron star, a white dwarf, or a black hole. The hyper giant stars go hypernova and make a gamma ray that eventually ends into a black hole.
No where, they will just stay put but the flames would have died out. Stars don't actually "die".
They will end up as neutron stars or even black holes. Usually they will first
explode as a supernova (of type1a).
There are several "ends" to stars. Supergiant stars end up as blackholes, some stars explode, others collide.
Yes. As with everything and anything in the universe, stars get older as time passes. When as star is very very old and ready to die, sometimes it will expand to a massive size (a red giant) due to the lack of gravity from the center to keep the gases close by and then collapse into a neutron star.
many stars die as a supernova. not really able to determine which types, because they die at random, but if they dont die as supernovas, they just collapse and disappear into one point in the sky.
Most do not. Stars about 10 times more massive than the sun or larger will explode. Smaller stars shed their outer layers gradually.
A star with a mass of 2solar masses, 2times the mass of the sun, would have a main-sequence stage of half the life of a star with the mass of our sun. More massive stars die faster, less massive stars live longer and therefore have longer main-sequence stages.
Prof. Brian Cox provides a great explanation in episode 2 of his excellent TV series 'Wonders of The Universe'. In short, many elements can only be created in the extreme conditions which exist within stars as they burn all their internal fuel and gradually 'die'. As they die, massive changes take place within stars, creating the conditions which are required to create different types of elements.
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.
Massive stars are brighter, they burn up faster, and they die younger, usually in very energetic explosions.
Most black holes are believed to form when very massive stars die.
Most stars usually die out
Massive, big, and very luminous stars turn into black holes most of the time
Yes they can
Once each. After that, they typically remain dead.
Yes. As with everything and anything in the universe, stars get older as time passes. When as star is very very old and ready to die, sometimes it will expand to a massive size (a red giant) due to the lack of gravity from the center to keep the gases close by and then collapse into a neutron star.
Yes. When the most massive stars die, their cores collapse to form black holes.
Yes. When the most massive stars die, their cores collapse to form black holes.
we all die
many stars die as a supernova. not really able to determine which types, because they die at random, but if they dont die as supernovas, they just collapse and disappear into one point in the sky.