A regular stars temperature cools as it balloons into a red giant. The color shift is evident by the word red because red is the coolest color of heat. The surface of a dying star is cool because it is so much farther away from the core than when it is on the main sequence. After a star sheds its 'skin' the only thing that is left is the white hot core, which will eventually dim to a brown dwarf which is nothing but the cool charred remains of the white dwarf and will give off little to no light.
No, white dwarfs are cooler than supergiants, they also have a lower luminosity (are more faint). A different viewpoint: There's obviously a range of temperatures for these stars, but the hottest (surface temperature) known star is in fact a white dwarf. It has a surface temperature of over 200,000 degrees Celsius.
None of those is a main sequence star.
The order of stellar evolution is typically: main sequence, red giant, and then white dwarf. Stars spend the majority of their life on the main sequence, where they fuse hydrogen into helium. As they exhaust their hydrogen, they expand into red giants. After shedding their outer layers, the remaining core becomes a white dwarf, which is the final stage of a low to medium mass star.
A giant star would experience a supernova explosion, in order to become a white dwarf.
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The correct order of these stellar evolutionary stages is main sequence, red giant, white dwarf. A star begins its life on the main sequence where it fuses hydrogen into helium. As it runs out of fuel, it expands into a red giant before shedding its outer layers and collapsing into a white dwarf.
nebula then protosar then red dwarf, yellow star or a blue giant then a red giant then a red super giant then eithr a white dwarf or a supernova from the supernova a black hole or a neutron star if it is a white dwarf it turns into a black dwarf then a black holeNebulaBaby starStarGiant or supergiantWhite dwarfBlack dwarf
The sun's life cycle includes the stages of formation, main-sequence, red giant, and white dwarf. It is currently in the main-sequence stage, where it fuses hydrogen into helium in its core. Eventually, it will expand into a red giant before shedding its outer layers and becoming a white dwarf.
Red giant is the largest and the brightest.
the temperature of..an white dwarf star is 10,000
The five main groups of stars are main sequence stars, giant stars, supergiant stars, white dwarf stars, and neutron stars. These groups are classified based on their size, temperature, and stage in their life cycle.
No, white dwarfs are cooler than supergiants, they also have a lower luminosity (are more faint). A different viewpoint: There's obviously a range of temperatures for these stars, but the hottest (surface temperature) known star is in fact a white dwarf. It has a surface temperature of over 200,000 degrees Celsius.
It is when the star is close to its death stage. {Main Sequence, Giant, Super Giant, and then the white dwarfs}
A red main sequence star would be a red dwarf or a branch red giant. To be on the main sequence, you have to have hydrogen nuclear fusion.
Nebula- protostar- Main Sequence Main Sequence- Red Giant- planetary nubula- white dwarf- black dwarf Main Sequence- Red Supergiant- supernova explosion- Nuetron star or a black hole
After its main sequence phase, a star like the Sun will enter the red giant phase where it expands and becomes cooler. Subsequently, it may evolve into a planetary nebula and eventually form a white dwarf.
None of those is a main sequence star.