Stars are born from nebula. When there is a concentration of matter somewhere the gravitational force starts to make the surrounding gas spin, and eventually it becomes a ball. During this process not all matter is incorporated into the star, and much debris eventually form planets (like our solar system). Also, fusion that takes place in the center of the star also helps to create heavier elements essential for planet creation. Death occurs when the star has expended all it's nuclear fuel, and fusion comes to a stop. Usually this means the star will at first expand to multiple times it's previous volume (mass is still steadily decreasing). Then, the star will be burning fuel in on more of its surface rather than it's core, and eventually does one of two things. Nova, which is a more peaceful, like shedding of the gas until all that remains is a gravity collapsed White Dwarf (about 5,000 miles radius). Or, Supernova, which occurs in stars less stable but larger than the sun, in other words a BIG EXPLOSION that lasts a few days. The force and amount of matter is undeniably higher, so the resulting dead star is smaller and even denser (Neutron star 5 miles radius, density about the weight of a typical mountain for each teaspoonful). Or, if the mass of the original star exceeds 1.44 the mass of the sun, it collapses into a black hole, which has no volume but still very formidable mass. I don't have to explain what it does, I think most human beings know. Hope I helped!
Bigger stars get hotter, and use up their fuel much faster than smaller stars.
we all die
They don't - new born stars and planets are formed together.
All stars go through a life cycle that includes formation, main sequence stage (like our Sun), expansion into red giants, and eventually either becoming a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole depending on its mass. Ultimately, all stars will exhaust their nuclear fuel and cease to emit light.
Those are called "circumpular" stars. Exactly which stars are circumpolar depends on your location. For example, if you live 30° south of the equator, all stars that are up to 30° from the south pole of the sky will never set.
Stars are born in a Nebula and die by burning out their energy.
stars are born from interstellar gas clouds, shine by nuclear fusion and then die
stars are born from interstellar gas clouds, shine by nuclear fusion and then die
No we are not born to die because we are born to live a life nd live it right so the answer is no
Stars are "born", mature, reach old age, then "die".
Of course. None of the cats will live forever. He will probably die in the series Omen of the Stars.
once the first stars are born they die and new stars are born and there really isn't a birthday for stars if you think about, it to us it could be 5,000,000 light years from now!
No, stars do not die every minute. Stars have different lifespans depending on their size and type. Some stars can live for billions of years while others may only live for a few million years. The death of a star usually takes place over a much longer timescale.
He did not live
born live die resurrect live die
It is estimated that around 275 to 7,000 stars are born each day in the observable universe. As for the number of stars that die each day, this is more difficult to estimate precisely, but on average, a few large stars likely go supernova every century in a galaxy like the Milky Way, which contains billions of stars.
How Plants Are Born Live and Die - 1912 was released on: USA: 30 January 1912