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Well, they don't affect us directly... But it's interesting to know that most stars - and pressumably that will include our Sun - will end up as a white dwarf, eventually. The exception is the most massive stars, which become neutron stars or black holes.
For the most part, the names of the Seven Dwarfs in "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" represent emotions or "feelings" that best describe the actions, personalities or disposition of the characters. Together, all seven dwarfs as one, represent the range of human emotions. The seven dwarfs were: 1) Happy 2) Sleepy 3) Grumpy 4) Sneezy 5) Doc 6) Bashful 7) Dopey
Walt Disney won an Academy Honorary Award at the 11th Academy Awards for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. This was his first Oscar for a feature film. Walt had previously won an Academy Honorary Award at the 5th Academy Awards for "the creation of Mickey Mouse".Walt Elias Disney won his 1st Oscar for d creation of Mickey Mouse in 1932. In his career Disney won 29 Oscars from his 59 nominations at d Oscar Awards, d most memorable being his 1937 win for Snow White & d 7 Dwarfs for which d Academy presented to him 7 miniature statuettes along with d Oscar statuette.
well as their names suggest, happy is always happy. and while bashful is happy most of the time as well, he is always bashful around snow white. hense the name bashful. bashful is happy, but happy is not bashful.
There are more white dwarfs. Only the most massive stars can form black holes. White dwarfs form from low to medium mass stars, which far outnumber the supermassive ones.
More white dwarves. Most stars will become white dwarves at the end of their lifetime. On a "select few" will become black holes - the most massive stars.
Most stars end up as white dwarfs. A few become neutron stars. Even fewer become black holes.
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False. Medium-sized stars become white dwarfs. Only the most massive stars form black holes.
the color of most of the stars in our galaxy are white. They are concered white dwarfs
Well, they don't affect us directly... But it's interesting to know that most stars - and pressumably that will include our Sun - will end up as a white dwarf, eventually. The exception is the most massive stars, which become neutron stars or black holes.
Well, they don't affect us directly... But it's interesting to know that most stars - and pressumably that will include our Sun - will end up as a white dwarf, eventually. The exception is the most massive stars, which become neutron stars or black holes.
Because luminosity is a measure of brightness over distance. Also white dwarfs are a hundred times smaller than the Sun. Most white dwarfs are a long way away and thus are difficult to see.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
No. The sun is in the 5% most massive stars in the galaxy.
Less massive stars end up as white dwarfs. More massive stars end up as a supernova or a neutron star or for the really massive stars...as a black hole. As a star ends its time in the main sequence it either becomes a Red Giant and end its life as a White Dwarf or becomes a White Super Giant and ends its life in an explosion (supernova) and if it's really dense it becomes a neutron star or a black hole as mentioned above.