black dwarf or neutron star
A collapsed star after using its fuel is called a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole, depending on its mass. White dwarfs are remnants of low to medium-mass stars, while neutron stars are remnants of massive stars. Black holes are formed from the most massive stars and have gravitational pull strong enough to trap even light.
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
A collapsed star is a term used to describe a "dead" star, which is a star that has come to the end of its lifetime and just collapses on itself. A black hole
A collapsed star is typically referred to as a black hole. Black holes form when massive stars run out of fuel and collapse under gravity, creating a region of spacetime with such intense gravitational pull that nothing, not even light, can escape from it.
A cold dead star is called a white dwarf. It is formed when a star has exhausted its nuclear fuel and collapsed under gravity, shrinking to a small, dense, and dim object.
A collapsed star after using its fuel is called a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole, depending on its mass. White dwarfs are remnants of low to medium-mass stars, while neutron stars are remnants of massive stars. Black holes are formed from the most massive stars and have gravitational pull strong enough to trap even light.
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
A collapsed star is a term used to describe a "dead" star, which is a star that has come to the end of its lifetime and just collapses on itself. A black hole
white dwarf
White dwarf.
no yubvo
A collapsed star is typically referred to as a black hole. Black holes form when massive stars run out of fuel and collapse under gravity, creating a region of spacetime with such intense gravitational pull that nothing, not even light, can escape from it.
A cold dead star is called a white dwarf. It is formed when a star has exhausted its nuclear fuel and collapsed under gravity, shrinking to a small, dense, and dim object.
A star, after using all of it's fuel explodes. We call this a super nova, and after this the star will either become a black dwarf star (or maybe a white dwarf) or it will collapse in on its self creating a black hole.
No, a white dwarf is generally smaller than a main sequence star because it is the remnant core of a star that has exhausted its nuclear fuel and collapsed. Main sequence stars are actively undergoing nuclear fusion and are typically larger in size.
It seems you are referring not to any collapsed star, but a black hole. The "event horizon" is the area from which nothing can escape.
It contains the entire collapsed star, however the star has collapsed to an infinitesimal point (or infinitesimally thin ring if its spinning) singularity, leaving everything around that totally empty except for warped spacetime (which is what causes gravity).