Eventually, yes. A mid-size star becomes a white dwarf, which eventually cools to become a black dwarf.
It will first become a red giant, then turn into a white dwarf and in billions and billions of years it will become a black dwarf.
A star, after using all of it's fuel explodes. We call this a super nova, and after this the star will either become a black dwarf star (or maybe a white dwarf) or it will collapse in on its self creating a black hole.
When a white dwarf star no longer emits energy, it becomes a black dwarf. Black dwarfs are theoretical end points of stellar evolution where all nuclear reactions have ceased, and the star has cooled down to the background temperature of the universe.
Different kinds of stars become different different stuffs......
A star that has burned out and no longer has fuel to sustain nuclear fusion in its core is called a white dwarf, not a black dwarf. A white dwarf is the remnant core of a low to medium mass star after its outer layers have been ejected. Over time, a white dwarf will cool down and eventually become a black dwarf, but this process takes billions of years.
It will first become a red giant, then turn into a white dwarf and in billions and billions of years it will become a black dwarf.
A medium sized star becomes a red giant or a white dwarf - depending on the circumstances. If the star collapses further than the white dwarf it can supernova or become a blackhole. Supernova'd stars rarely become blackholes - the density of what is left is nowhere near the density a blackhole needs to be born.
Nebula protostar mid sized star red giant nova white dwarf black dwarf:)
No, a dead star is different from a black dwarf. A black dwarf is a type of stellar remnant, but not all stars become black dwarfs. When a star dies it will leave behind a white dwarf, a neutron star, or a black dwarf as a remnant depending on its mass. Given enough time a white dwarf will eventually cool to a black dwarf. The universe is not old enough for this cooling to have happened yet.
A star, after using all of it's fuel explodes. We call this a super nova, and after this the star will either become a black dwarf star (or maybe a white dwarf) or it will collapse in on its self creating a black hole.
It stays where it is. It will eventually become a black dwarf.
No in the life cycle of a star, a white dwarf can cool and become a black dwarf
a star of about sun's mass will become a white dwarf star and will fade slowly into a black dwarf. a star of sun's 1.4 to 3 time the mass of the sun will become a neutron star. a star of more than 3 times of mass of the sun will become a black hole. hopes its help!!
-average size -expands and becomes a red giant -cools and contracts, becomes a white dwarf star -massive sized stars -swell and become red supergiants -explode (called a supernova) -become a black hole -become a neutron star
When a white dwarf star no longer emits energy, it becomes a black dwarf. Black dwarfs are theoretical end points of stellar evolution where all nuclear reactions have ceased, and the star has cooled down to the background temperature of the universe.
A low mass star will become a white dwarf star, eventually this will cool to become a black dwarf. A high mass star (at least 8 times the mass of our Sun) will form a neutron star or a black hole, after a supernova event.
Different kinds of stars become different different stuffs......