Black dwarfs. [See related question]
A white dwarf could not become a red dwarf. A white dwarf is a remnant of a dead star. A red dwarf is a star with a very low mass.
No. A white dwarf is the remnant of a star in which fusion as stopped.
No, Pluto is a dwarf planet in our solar system, not a white dwarf star. White dwarfs are remnants of low to medium mass stars that have exhausted their nuclear fuel and collapsed. Pluto is too small to undergo nuclear fusion and become a star.
No, the sun will not become a neutron star. Neutron stars form from the remnants of massive stars that have undergone a supernova explosion. The sun is not massive enough to undergo this process and will instead evolve into a white dwarf.
Yes, some of the 20 nearest stars are white dwarfs. For example, Sirius B, the companion star to Sirius A, is a white dwarf. Among the 20 brightest stars, Sirius B is the only white dwarf.
No in the life cycle of a star, a white dwarf can cool and become a black dwarf
No. A white dwarf is a remnant of a dead star.
A white dwarf could not become a red dwarf. A white dwarf is a remnant of a dead star. A red dwarf is a star with a very low mass.
No. It does not have enough mass. Only stars 8 times the mass of the sun or greater can become neutron stars. The sun will become a white dwarf.
Stars with more than about 80% of the Sun's mass behave like the Sun. They should eventually become red giant stars then white dwarf stars. Stars with mass of between about 8% and 80% of the Sun's mass are red dwarf stars. Below that come the "brown dwarfs, which aren't really true stars at all. The red dwarfs cannot fuse helium, so they simply become "white dwarf" stars when they have used up all their hydrogen "fuel".
No. A white dwarf is the remnant of a star in which fusion as stopped.
Not exactly. Red giants become white dwarf stars. It is the red supergiants that can become supernovas.
A star that becomes a white dwarf simply does not have the mass to become a neutron star. White dwarfs are the the remnants of a star very similar to our own sun in mass, where it takes a much more massive star to create a neutron star, Like the star Betelgeuse is a prime example of a star that does not have the mass to become a black hole but is massive enough to become a neutron star.
when Dwarf Stars run out of hydrogen they form Red Giant stars, then from that they become White dwarf stars when the outer layers shed, forming a planetary nebula.when giant stars or supergiant stars run out of hydrogen they form red supergiant stars
No, Pluto is a dwarf planet in our solar system, not a white dwarf star. White dwarfs are remnants of low to medium mass stars that have exhausted their nuclear fuel and collapsed. Pluto is too small to undergo nuclear fusion and become a star.
Yes there are a few more [See related link for more information].--- Main sequence stars -----Red dwarf Yellow dwarfBlue dwarf (hypothetical)--- Degenerate stars --------White dwarf Black dwarf (hypothetical)--- Sub stellar stars -------Brown dwarf.
Many stars are white dwarfs.