No our Sun is a fully formed Star. A Protostar is gas that is still acreeting matter (still collecting via gravtaional rotation) to form a star. And as a result they are not very bright as they have not condensed enough to start Nuclear Fusion.
A protosun is a young star in the early stages of formation, where nuclear fusion has not yet started in its core. Once nuclear fusion begins in the core, the protosun transitions into a sun and starts emitting light and heat.
what do the largest clumps surrounding the protosun to begin to form
The nebular hypothesis suggests that protoplanets began to form around the protosun from the collisions and combinations of gas and matter in the protoplanetary disk. This theory explains how the solar system's planets, including Earth, formed from the rotating disk of gas and dust around the young Sun about 4.6 billion years ago.
The eventual fate of our sun is to become a White Dwarf.
No. It does not have enough mass. Only stars 8 times the mass of the sun or greater can become pulsars. The sun will become a white dwarf.
A protosun is a young star in the early stages of formation, where nuclear fusion has not yet started in its core. Once nuclear fusion begins in the core, the protosun transitions into a sun and starts emitting light and heat.
Protosun
The protosun has not fully "ignited" meaning nuclear fusion is not stably providing the energy output of the star. Once ignition takes place, the central core of the sun will produce energy almost exclusively through fusion, creating enough energy and radiation to slowly wash away the nebulous gas surrounding the protosun revealing the sun itself.
Heat, derived from gravitational energy. The gravitational collapse of the original nebula of gas and dust produced very high temperatures and a "protosun". Eventually the protosun became a star (our Sun) when the nuclear fusion reactions began at temperatures of millions of degrees Celsius.
The name given to the concentration of mass at the center of the solar nebula that eventually formed the Sun is the protosun or solar protostar. This dense core accumulated gas and dust, triggering nuclear fusion to ignite as a star.
what do the largest clumps surrounding the protosun to begin to form
A protosun is a sun (star) that is still forming. It takes millions of years of solar winds and gravitational forces to gather and compress massive clouds of hydrogen to the point where it's gravity is powerful enough to cause nuclear fusion at it's core and "ignite" a new star.
The nebular hypothesis suggests that protoplanets began to form around the protosun from the collisions and combinations of gas and matter in the protoplanetary disk. This theory explains how the solar system's planets, including Earth, formed from the rotating disk of gas and dust around the young Sun about 4.6 billion years ago.
No. The sun does not have enough mass to become a black hole. When the sun dies it will become a white dwarf.
The sun is not alive, only living specis can become extinct.
The eventual fate of our sun is to become a White Dwarf.
No. it is not massive enough. When the sun dies it will become a white dwarf.