Not all do, only ones that are massive enough that when Helium and Hydrogen stop burning are unable to maintain hydrostatic equilibrium and the matter collapses on itself. Some obtain this matter by pulling it off a companion or merging with another star, some are just so large that after the fuel is up it cannot support its own weight.
Planets and stars do all eventually die.
If a supernova were to explode nearby, then life on Earth might be impacted by the increased amount of radiation that would strike our planet, especially X-rays and cosmic rays. Fortunately for us, there are no nearby stars which are good candidates to be come supernovas. The closest is the red giant star Betelgeuse, in Orion, at about 800 light years away. When Betelgeuse explodes, it may shine as brightly as the full Moon!
Bigger stars get hotter, and use up their fuel much faster than smaller stars.
we all die
Actually there is only one element that was formed shortly after the big bang and that is hydrogen. All the other elements were made either by nuclear reactions taking place in the core of burning stars, or by the catastrophic explosion called supernovas that are sometimes produced when stars die. - This is from a highly credible source (book)
Black holes
many stars die as a supernova. not really able to determine which types, because they die at random, but if they dont die as supernovas, they just collapse and disappear into one point in the sky.
Massive stars with at least eight times the mass of the Sun end their lives as supernovae. During their final stages, they undergo a rapid collapse and explosion, releasing an immense amount of energy and forming a bright supernova.
Some stars explode in a supernova.
Stars can die in many ways. After a long life, there are two distinct paths to a star's death. They can either start the path to death after becoming a planetary nebula, or a red supergiant. Following the red giant phase some stars become white dwarfs and then black dwarfs. If the star is a red supergiant, it supernovas, then it will either become a black hole, or a neutron star. Those are the only known and recorded ways that stars can "die". However, the science behind the death is much more complicated and intriguing. Source: Wikipedia
Planets and stars do all eventually die.
Constellations are imaginary patterns in the sky formed by stars. As some stars burn out, new stars form.
white dwarf ---> black dwarf. Only difference is amount of heat.Neutron star (also knows as Pulsar)black holesub-stellar wreckage. Veil Nebula, Planetary nebula,1. Dwarf stars2. Supernovas (Neutron Stars)3. Black holesIt depends on the size and mass
yes they do die a couple of times. In the sailor stars episode i believe they all die even darien but come back. Darien comes back at the last sailor stars episode for the last five minutes
If a supernova were to explode nearby, then life on Earth might be impacted by the increased amount of radiation that would strike our planet, especially X-rays and cosmic rays. Fortunately for us, there are no nearby stars which are good candidates to be come supernovas. The closest is the red giant star Betelgeuse, in Orion, at about 800 light years away. When Betelgeuse explodes, it may shine as brightly as the full Moon!
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.
Yes because stars die, and new ones come back to life!