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What happens to the large bright stars that are created in the waves of a spiral galaxy?

They explode


Does every star explode?

No. Only the most massive stars explode.


What happens when stars go into a black hole?

stars explode


What will happen if the five stars explode?

Depends on which 5 stars


Do stars explode?

Some stars do. They can be nova or supernova stars, depending on the scale of the explosion.


What is it called when stars in the sky die?

Some stars explode in a supernova.


What form do old stars take?

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.


What is the space in space called after a star explode?

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 :)


How does the future of massive stars differ from the future of smaller stars?

Massive stars are most likely to explode faster than smaller stars.


Do stars let off radiation waves when they explode?

Yes.


How does a star run out of gas then causing it to explode?

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


Where does the element magnisiun originate from?

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.