A star eventually uses up all of it's hydrogen in nuclear fusion. They fusion of hydrogen into helium is what makes the star glow bright and hot. When all the helium is fused, the star collapses inward on itself, and becomes a small "white dwarf" star, essentially a pile of "stellar embers". That's the end of a star's life.
No. The sun burns its hydrogen and will eventually use up all its fuel. The Sun is a name of the Star in our galaxy. There are two ways a star will die out. Some Stars will bascially explode. Others will cool and contract to a small, dense star. They do not melt.
white dwarf star
A white dwarf.
neutron star. When the life cycle is done with a star the star stops growing and eventually dies.
No. And that's 'when' not 'if'. All suns die eventually. Our Sun will last for millions of years.
yes unfortunately
Eventually, yes it can. Eventually (maybe over a period of a few billion years) all the stars will die, and new ones will take their place. You know that the sun will eventually die? That's because the sun is just one giant star, and when the sun dies - so do we.
All stars will eventually run out of hydrogen and die.
As far as we know, the sun will never become a neutron star. it will eventually become a Red Giant and then it will eventually become a white dwarf
No. The sun burns its hydrogen and will eventually use up all its fuel. The Sun is a name of the Star in our galaxy. There are two ways a star will die out. Some Stars will bascially explode. Others will cool and contract to a small, dense star. They do not melt.
white dwarf star
They will all eventually run out of fuel.
A white dwarf.
neutron star. When the life cycle is done with a star the star stops growing and eventually dies.
It will turn into a giant star, explode, and turn into a nebula.
Astronomy or sun
The Sun will become a "Red Giant" star. This will engulf some of the inner planets and heat up the whole Solar System. Eventually the giant star will "die", leaving behind a "White Dwarf" star.