A low mass star will become a white dwarf star, eventually this will cool to become a black dwarf. A high mass star (at least 8 times the mass of our Sun) will form a neutron star or a black hole, after a supernova event.
After a red giant phase, a star will undergo further evolutionary stages depending on its mass. A low-mass star like the Sun will evolve into a planetary nebula and then eventually into a white dwarf. A high-mass star will undergo a supernova explosion, leading to the formation of a neutron star or black hole.
Formation of the star out of a giant cloud of gas and dust.
High mass.
A red giant star.
A low mass star will become a white dwarf star, eventually this will cool to become a black dwarf. A high mass star (at least 8 times the mass of our Sun) will form a neutron star or a black hole, after a supernova event.
After a red giant phase, a star will undergo further evolutionary stages depending on its mass. A low-mass star like the Sun will evolve into a planetary nebula and then eventually into a white dwarf. A high-mass star will undergo a supernova explosion, leading to the formation of a neutron star or black hole.
white dwarf if it has low mass Neutron star or Blackhole if it is massive enough to cause a red super giant
Low-mass stars are expected to become white dwarves.
A low to medium-mass star eventually evolves into a red giant as it runs out of fuel in its core. After shedding its outer layers, the star will collapse into a white dwarf, which is the end stage of its life cycle.
Orion is a constellation, not a star. Betelgeuse, the red giant at the left shoulder of Orion, is a supergiant.
Formation of the star out of a giant cloud of gas and dust.
Actually if a star is medium or low mass is will run out of fuel and turn into a red giant, once the stars atmosphere slowly drifts away and the core is remaining it will eventually become a white dwarf For more massive stars it will turn in to a super giant the will cause a supernova, after the supernova the star can either a black hole or a neutron star
High mass.
A red giant star.
According to wikipedia, A red giant is a luminous giant star of low or intermediate mass (roughly 0.5-10 solar masses) that is in a late phase of stellar evolution.
White dwarf stage. Its shrinks to a lot extent in this stage. Edit: A high mass star is usually one that becomes a supergiant then a supernova. Eventually this should leave either a neutron star or a black hole, depending on the mass of the star. The previous answer is for low mass stars.