That would depend on the size (mass) of the star. Please be more precise with your question for us to answer it.
Star - not dying White-dwarf, dying Red-Giant, near the end but will collapse or explode in a while Stable star - haven't heard that term, but doesn't sound like it Galaxy - a collection of stars
Dying stars eventually shrink into white dwarfs (which as they age eventually become red dwarfs and then brown dwarfs - but this takes an extremely long time).
a supernova
A dying star that gives no light is called a black dwarf. This celestial object is the remnant of a sun-like star that has exhausted all its nuclear fuel and has cooled down to a point where it no longer emits any visible light.
1000000 degrees
what do you call a dying sar that explodes into millions of lights
A dying star is a small red one . These stars lived for a long time and won't change much . However , if the star's center starts to produce heavy metals (like Iron and more ), it will quickly die . Why ? The production of these elements absorb energy and once the nucleus hardens , the star implode because there is no more strengh against the extreme gravity . It creates a neutron star ( Pulsar ) , which is the heaviest substance possible . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4VmMr9TWzY4 http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/know_l1/pulsars.html
Alpha latin... Mi star
Because they run out of the resources they use which consist of gases. It eventually 'dies' just like you would if you didnt eat food for a long period of time. This results in the star dying/exploding causing a supernova explosion
carbon dioxide
A huge explosion from a dying star.
The dying phase of a massive star begins when it runs out of usable hydrogen that it can convert to helium. Once it becomes a red giant, it slowly dies out.