Ah, isn't that a beautiful question, friend? Just like all living things, stars have their own journey to take. Our sun, a bright and warm being, will one day transform into a calm and content white dwarf, gracefully continuing its presence in the universe for eons to come.
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.
No, Betelgeuse is not a main sequence star. It is a red supergiant star, which is a more evolved stage in the life cycle of a star compared to main sequence stars like the Sun. Betelgeuse is near the end of its life and is expected to go supernova in the relatively near future (on astronomical timescales).
No, the Sun is a star. All stars are huge, hot, bright burning balls of gas like the Sun - the only reason they don't look like that are because all the other stars are much further away from us. A planet is a large round object that orbits a star. Stars like the Sun give out light, planets do not shine.
Our sun is actually a small star, tons of stars are way bigger than our sun. One. Each star is a sun.
white dwarf star
In the past it was a main sequence star. In the future it will be a giant star and will cool off.
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.
A yellow star. The Sun is definitely not a red giant; if it were to swell to the size of a red giant (like Antares, for example), our Earth would end up inside the Sun.
That sounds like a description of the Sun. However, please note that our Sun is not "like" a star; it actually is a star.
The sun is a star, so any star could be much like our sun.
Life on Earth will probably come to an end when your star, the sun, begins to fuse helium instead of hydrogen. It will happen sometime between 3000 and 5000 million years into the future.
a sphere just like every planet (sun) star==sun
Sun IS a STAr
Life cycle of a sun like star. A sun like star will start out as a nebula to a protostar to a main sequence star to a red giant and into a white dwarf and will simply fade out.
No, Betelgeuse is not a main sequence star. It is a red supergiant star, which is a more evolved stage in the life cycle of a star compared to main sequence stars like the Sun. Betelgeuse is near the end of its life and is expected to go supernova in the relatively near future (on astronomical timescales).
A medium-sized star, like our Sun.
No, the Sun is a star. All stars are huge, hot, bright burning balls of gas like the Sun - the only reason they don't look like that are because all the other stars are much further away from us. A planet is a large round object that orbits a star. Stars like the Sun give out light, planets do not shine.