When smaller stars explode (like our Sun), they leave a nebula cloud by releasing their gas and they become a small but dense white dwarf star.When big stars explode (like Betelgeuse), they have a massive explosion called a supernova and the core of the star turns into a black hole or a pulsar.
Yes, dying stars can become very bright. As they run out of nuclear fuel, some stars expand into red giants or supergiants, which can increase their brightness. Additionally, some dying stars, like supernovae, can produce intense bursts of light as they explode.
When stars explode, they release a tremendous amount of energy in a violent explosion known as a supernova. Depending on the mass of the star, it may collapse into a compact object like a neutron star or a black hole, or scatter its materials into space, enriching the surrounding regions with heavy elements.
Most do not. Stars about 10 times more massive than the sun or larger will explode. Smaller stars shed their outer layers gradually.
The elements do not die. The stars collapse into dense dwarf or neutron stars. But many explode as novae and the elements are scattered into space. This is the dust from which the next generation of planets are born.
They explode
No. Only the most massive stars explode.
stars explode
Depends on which 5 stars
Some stars do. They can be nova or supernova stars, depending on the scale of the explosion.
Some stars explode in a supernova.
The fate of an old star depends on its mass. Small stars will burn, essentially, forever. Medium mass stars like our Sun will eventually expand into a red giant, and collapse into a white dwarf. Very large stars will explode as supernova stars; these end up as neutron stars or if their initial mass is large enough, as black holes.
well it depends on the star. not all stars explode. small to medium sized stars just go into a planetary nebula after they swell up to a red giant then the bigger stars do explode, they have a super nova after the swell up into a super giant. but dont worry i star will not explode... its a really small star. --- nichole brooks :)
Massive stars are most likely to explode faster than smaller stars.
Yes.
OK maybe when is runs out of gas all the gas around it will explode because the heat of the star too. so that is why the stars explode
Fundamentally, magnesium comes from the massive amounts of heat and pressure produced when very large stars explode. In this explosion, every element on the periodic table after carbon was created. Magnesium just happened to be one of those. Also, if you're wondering how it got on Earth; when such stars explode, they produce massive clouds of gas and dust (and by massive I mean many light-years across), which condense to form large disks of gas and dust (a good fraction bigger than our solar system). These turn into stars, and the spinning disks of, you guessed it, dust and gas, sometimes turn into planets. These planets contain a large variety of the elements made by the very large stars.