Oh, what a peaceful question, my friend! Stars form quite slowly and take many millions of years to come alive in the vast universe. The beautiful process of stellar birth is filled with swirling gases and gentle whispers of creation. Just like a painting that unfolds brushstroke by brushstroke, a star takes its time blooming into a dance of light among the cosmic canvas.
A star life cycle takes millions of years. Some stars even last for billions of years, which can be older than our universe.
Well my friend, stars take quite some time to form in the vast and beautiful universe. They usually start off as clouds of gas and dust, and the process of gravity and fusion works its magic over millions to billions of years until a star is born, like a precious little seed growing into a splendid tree reaching up to the sky. Remember, these cosmic creations follow their own gentle rhythm, just enjoy the journey as the universe works its painting magic.
It takes at least 30 Minutes to install.
It is called a white dwarf. It is the penultimate stage of a star the size of the Sun, which progresses with age from a yellow or orange star, to a red giant, to a white dwarf, and ultimately (after an immensely long period of time) a black dwarf. (There are no confirmed black dwarf stars because their formation may take much longer than the current age of the universe.)
Gamma rays are a form of electromagnetic radiation, and thus they travel at the speed of light. If a star is one light year away, it will reach Earth in one year.
2.6 billions years
The sun, the earth, the moon, you, me, every star you see, and every star you can't see,are all in the universe. In fact, there is nowhere else to go to or come from. "Universe" meansAll the places, all the things, and all the time, that ever were, are, and will be.
When a star explodes, that's the end of the star. The stellar remnant - either a neutron star or a black hole is created instantly.
It takes about 10 million years for a star like our sun to form and reach its stable state.
Depends on how you define power. If we take it as transferring energy then it will have to be the most luminous. So the most luminous star known in the Universe is R136a1
We all belong to the Universe, so we have already arrived . .
There is no other star that revolves around our sun. There are, however, many double and triple star systems in the universe, where the stars in the system revolve around each other.
Answer #1:A long time.......=====================Answer #2:Classically, it would take(the diameter of the universe, in miles)/(5,878,464,424,000) years.
1.34 seconds
A star life cycle takes millions of years. Some stars even last for billions of years, which can be older than our universe.
I had taken a course on the universe at UCR and my professor, a graduate of MIT, said that it took approximately 30 days for the moon to form after a planetoid collided with Earth. Yes, days haha
just go around your mom