Massive Stars.
Oops! Not all stars end up as a supernova. To become a Type 2 supernova, the star has to be between 8 and 50 times larger than the Sun.
Massive stars, typically around eight times the mass of our sun, will end their life in a supernova explosion. During the explosion, the outer layers of the star are expelled into space, leaving behind a dense core known as a neutron star or black hole.
A nebula contains stars and other matter; a supernova is just a large enough nova, or star that explodes at the end of its life cycle due to spent fuel
No because smaller stars can live longer than bigger stars and the big stars wont live as long but will end in a very violent explosion.That can result in a major supernova and even a black hole smaller stars will die in a much less violent way.
A supernova is not a single star, but an event that occurs to the most massive stars when they reach the end of their life. Therefore it cannot be named. See related questions for details on Supernova
Oops! Not all stars end up as a supernova. To become a Type 2 supernova, the star has to be between 8 and 50 times larger than the Sun.
It will end its life as a type II supernova.
The most massive stars will end up as black holes. Those are the stars that have more than approximately 3 solar masses at the end of their life - i.e., AFTER the supernova explosion.
Heavy stars go supernova at the end of their lives.
Massive stars, typically around eight times the mass of our sun, will end their life in a supernova explosion. During the explosion, the outer layers of the star are expelled into space, leaving behind a dense core known as a neutron star or black hole.
Betelgeuse is expected to end its life in a supernova explosion, likely as a Type II supernova due to its massive size and age. This type of supernova occurs when a massive star exhausts its nuclear fuel and collapses under its own gravity.
A nebula contains stars and other matter; a supernova is just a large enough nova, or star that explodes at the end of its life cycle due to spent fuel
No because smaller stars can live longer than bigger stars and the big stars wont live as long but will end in a very violent explosion.That can result in a major supernova and even a black hole smaller stars will die in a much less violent way.
A supernova is not a single star, but an event that occurs to the most massive stars when they reach the end of their life. Therefore it cannot be named. See related questions for details on Supernova
A supernova
The most massive ones. The exact amount of mass requires varies, depending on the type of supernova, and on the element mix of the initial star.
They are not. A supernova is an explosion of a star. Blue stars usually end their lives in such explosions.