Yes, a nebula is far larger than a neutron star. A neutron star is a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
No. A neutron star is quite small, generally only a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
No. A nebula is a billion, if not more, times larger than our Sun
Yes, the Orion Nebula is much larger than the sun. The Orion Nebula is a diffuse nebula, while the sun is a star. The Orion Nebula is approximately 24 light-years across, while the sun is about 864,000 miles in diameter.
As a nebula is an extremely vast region of space comprised of hydrogen & helium gas, dust and other gases and plasmas, it would be fair to say that they are many, many times larger than even the largest star. Nebulae are often referred to as 'stellar nurseries' as these tend to be regions in which many stars are formed.
No, our sun is not massive enough to become a neutron star. When our sun runs out of fuel, it will shed its outer layers and become a planetary nebula, leaving behind a dense core called a white dwarf.
Yes, a solar nebula is much larger than a neutron star. In terms of objects in space, neutron stars are tiny; only a few miles across. A stellar nebula such as the one that formed the sun is light years across.
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.
A white dwarf is much larger than a neutron star.
Because the atoms inside the neutron star are squashed together to the point that they cannot move anymore, for example a teaspoon of neutron is about 90,000,000 tonnes. So basicly pretty much anything in the universe isn't as dense as that. hope this helps.
A subgiant star is larger than a neutron star. Neutron stars are incredibly dense and compact remnants of massive stars, while subgiant stars are in a transitional phase between main sequence and red giant stages, typically larger and more diffuse than neutron stars.
No. A neutron star is quite small, generally only a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
No. A neutron star is quite small, generally only a few miles across. A nebula is light years across.
Because nebula, like galaxies, do not have a defining edge, it is difficult to determine the exact size but an estimate is the closest you'll get.However, in this case, the difference is large enough.The Tarantula Nebula is about 15 times larger than the Carina Nebula.Tarantula ~ 1,000 light years acrossCarina ~ 65 light years across.
No. A nebula is a billion, if not more, times larger than our Sun
Yes, the Orion Nebula is much larger than the sun. The Orion Nebula is a diffuse nebula, while the sun is a star. The Orion Nebula is approximately 24 light-years across, while the sun is about 864,000 miles in diameter.
A subgiant star is bigger than a neutron star. Neutron stars are incredibly dense and compact, with a radius of about 10-15 kilometers, while subgiant stars have a larger radius of several million kilometers.
A black hole has more mass than a neutron star, but if you are comparing volume it would depend on the mass of the black hole. A neutron star is estimated to be about 14 miles in diameter, which is larger than the event horizon of a black hole up to about 3.8 times the mass of the sun. A more massive black hole will be larger.