A star does not "stay" in a nebula; rather, it forms within a nebula. A nebula is a vast cloud of gas and dust where star formation occurs, and the process can take millions of years. Once a star forms, it will eventually evolve and leave the nebula, transitioning into different stages of its lifecycle, such as a main-sequence star, red giant, or supernova, depending on its mass. Thus, a star is only associated with a nebula during the initial stages of its formation.
A star typically stays as a stellar nebula for a few million years to tens of millions of years before nuclear fusion ignites within it, transforming it into a main sequence star. This process occurs once the internal pressure and temperature reach a point where hydrogen fusion can occur.
Yes, a nebula is far larger than a neutron star. A neutron star is a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
The Sun is a star, specifically a G-type main-sequence star, which is the star at the center of our solar system. It is not a planet or a nebula.
Star formation starts in a nebula.
cassiopeia
a nebula is cloud of particles which forms into a star.
A nebula may condense and ignite to become a star, conversely a star may explode and form a nebula.
A star typically stays as a stellar nebula for a few million years to tens of millions of years before nuclear fusion ignites within it, transforming it into a main sequence star. This process occurs once the internal pressure and temperature reach a point where hydrogen fusion can occur.
A White Dwarf Star remains.
A Nebula is a gas of dust and minerals that surrounds a star. Also, a nebula is a birthplace of a star, where a star and sometimes a solar system is formed after a huge explosions
A stellar nebula can exist for millions to billions of years, depending on the size and mass of the nebula. These nebulae are the birthplaces of stars and can last until all the matter within them has been used up in the process of star formation.
The nebula in a galaxy is a dead star, long dead, possibly about to turn into a black hole. actually, its the opposite: nebula is like a cloud of space trash. when the "cloud" gets too big, it explodes. the bigger the explosion, the bigger the new star.
A star like our sun will shed a planetary nebula after its 'death'
No, a neutron star can't become a nebula. A neutron star is not made of atomic matter, has less mass than a nebula, and has no mechanism by which to expand.
No, Arcturus is a red giant star, not a nebula.
Yes, a nebula is far larger than a neutron star. A neutron star is a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
protostar or nebula