The term is "protostar", not "prostar". Yes. A protostar is an early stage of a star.
False. Only the most massive stars will become black holes.
the simple reson is mass.......that is if the star under consideration is a heavy one, it is more likely to turn into a black hole and if it is comparatively smaller it is prone to turn into a neutron star or a white dwarf
Dead stars are not necessarily black holes. Dead stars can become white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes depending on their mass. Only the most massive dead stars can collapse further to become black holes if they exceed the Chandrasekhar limit, around 1.4 times the mass of the Sun.
When fusion stops in a star it will start to fuse helium and will become a red giant.
No, low mass stars do not become neutron stars. Low mass stars like the Sun end their lives as white dwarfs. Medium mass stars can evolve into neutron stars, but they must first go through the supernova stage to shed their outer layers and leave behind a dense core of neutrons.
The duration of ProStars is 1800.0 seconds.
ProStars was created on 1991-09-14.
ProStars ended on 1991-12-07.
ProStars - 1991 was released on: USA: 14 September 1991
Some massive stars will become neutron stars. When massive stars die they will either become neutron stars or black holes depending on how much mass is left behind.
The difference is in mass. Low to medium mass stars (up to about 8-10 solar masses) become white dwarfs. Massive stars (10 to 25 solar masses) become neutron stars. Stars above 25 solar masses tend to become black holes.
Stars that become white dwarfs die but become black holes . Neutron stars are born from a Super Nova that stored its energy and became a neutron star.
They Collide and become part of another star which causes Stars to be come Parts of other Stars.
No. Stars such as our sun become white dwarfs. Only stars 8-10 times the mass of the sun or more become neutron stars.
There are three types of stellar remnants. Low to medium mass stars will become white dwarfs. High mass stars will become neutron stars. Very high mass stars will become black holes.
Stars are tremendously larger than asteroids and do not become asteroids.
Not all protostars become true stars. Some protostars may not have enough mass to sustain nuclear fusion in their cores and never become true stars, instead becoming failed stars known as brown dwarfs.