Yes.
High, typically 10 to 70 times (or more) the mass of our own sun.
High mass stars have a faster rate of burning compared to low mass stars. This is because high mass stars have more gravitational pressure in their cores, leading to faster nuclear reactions and higher energy output. This results in a shorter lifespan for high mass stars compared to low mass stars.
Yes , it is true.
It depends. With current theoretical knowledge, a star of this mass has two possible outcomes. 1) It erupts in a cataclysmic explosion as a supernova and then forms into a black hole or 2) If the mass is high enough, currently believed to be around 50 solar masses, it will form directly into a black hole without the supernova.
A high density will have a higher number, as density is calculated by dividing mass by volume. The result is a measure of how much mass is present in a given volume, so a higher density means there is more mass packed into that volume.
There are 2 names and that all depends on the mass of the start to start with. Our Sun when it dies will cast off its outer layers into what is called a Spacial Cloud. More massive starts on the order of 4 times as large as our star will die violently in what is Called a Super Nova.
The mass of the star is the main factor that determines its fate when it dies. Stars with more mass will undergo more violent and spectacular deaths, such as exploding as supernovae or collapsing into black holes. Less massive stars may end their lives more quietly as white dwarfs or neutron stars.
you are fire. the more you give it fire the more it grows high but when you give it water it dies.
There are 2 names and that all depends on the mass of the start to start with. Our Sun when it dies will cast off its outer layers into what is called a Spacial Cloud. More massive starts on the order of 4 times as large as our star will die violently in what is Called a Super Nova.
High, typically 10 to 70 times (or more) the mass of our own sun.
The mass of Gamma Draconis (Eltanin) is listed in Wikipedia as 1.7 times the mass of our Sun. That is a fairly high mass (even our Sun is in the top 10 percentile, according to mass), although much more massive stars do exist.
1. It has more gravitational force exerted on other objects 2. It holds more energy than smaller objects
High mass stars have a faster rate of burning compared to low mass stars. This is because high mass stars have more gravitational pressure in their cores, leading to faster nuclear reactions and higher energy output. This results in a shorter lifespan for high mass stars compared to low mass stars.
Gravity is determined by mass. Everything with mass has gravitational pull (including you). Planets with more mass have higher gravitational pulls
Yes , it is true.
Metals such as magnesium, zinc, and iron will react more violently than aluminum with hydrochloric acid. This is because these metals are higher in the reactivity series and will displace hydrogen gas more readily from the acid.
Shield Volcanoes erupt less violently and flows further then composite volcanoes. A composite volcano erupts more violently.